Friday, January 9, 2026

Balderson Cheese

 

I bought Kraft cheese until I read on the package, "Processed Cheese Food"!  I immediately stopped buying it and just looked it up to see what exactly we were eating:

Processed cheese is made from a blend of natural cheeses mixed with emulsifying salts, water, milk fats, milk proteins, salt, colours and flavourings then heated and blended to create a consistent, uniform, meltable product with a longer shelf life!  How appetizing!

I can't remember when I moved to Balderson but it was many years ago.  It's available at Costco and is an excellent cheese.  Costco doesn't have Balderson slices, but the cheese slices I buy are "real cheese", not processed.  Perhaps when we get a larger Costco they may carry the slices.   I will check the new Costco Business Center the next time I go as they could have them.  In any case, I buy these at Costco too as they are pre-sliced and really handy to have as an easy snack:


The origins of Balderson Cheese trace back to 1881, when dairy farmers in Lanark County, Ontario joined forces to create a cooperative cheese factory. They built a modest wood‑frame building at a rural crossroads known as Balderson Corners, named after John Balderson, a retired British army sergeant who settled there in the 1860s.

Pooling their milk and resources, these farmers set out to produce a local cheddar that reflected the quality of their land and livestock. This collaboration marked the birth of the Balderson Corners Cheese Factory, the foundation of the brand we know today.

As the factory prospered, a village grew around it. Balderson Corners became a lively hub where farmers, families, and merchants gathered. The factory’s success even attracted competitors, but none could match the distinctive sharpness, smooth texture, and careful aging that defined Balderson cheddar.

By the late 19th century, Balderson was already earning national recognition. The factory was one of twelve Ontario cheese producers that contributed curds to the famous 22,000‑lb “Mammoth Cheese” showcased at the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago—a symbol of Canadian dairy excellence.

n 1928, disaster struck when the original factory was destroyed by fire. But the community’s commitment to its cheese was unwavering. A new factory was quickly built, allowing production to continue without missing a season.

Over the decades that followed:

The factory expanded multiple times

A dedicated Balderson Cheese store opened in 1970

The brand continued to win national awards and international recognition for quality

By the late 20th century, Balderson had grown from a rural cooperative into a respected name in Canadian dairy.

Another great Canadian company to patronize!

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Cruises into Halifax

Halifax has officially arrived on the world stage. A banner year for tourism in 2025 has transformed the waterfront into one of Canada’s most sought-after destinations, with momentum building well into 2026.

The Halifax Harbour welcomed more than 357,000 cruise passengers across 184 vessel calls, including seven overnight stays that gave visitors extra time to experience the city’s shops, dining, and culture. The season also marked several firsts, with six new cruise ships making their inaugural visits, including the highly anticipated Brilliant Lady.

Canadians played a major role in this surge, choosing to explore closer to home as travel costs and uncertainty abroad reshaped vacation plans. Hotels across the region reached near-capacity, helping drive Nova Scotia’s tourism revenue to an impressive $3.0 billion by September.

Looking ahead, the excitement continues. Major international events such as SailGP and the ICF Junior & U23 Canoe Sprint World Championships are set to bring even more global attention. With new accommodations coming online, Halifax is more prepared than ever to welcome visitors from around the world.

From ocean views to unmatched East Coast hospitality, the secret is out — there’s truly nowhere like the Maritimes.

I've been to Halifax by cruise ship twice.  The first time we went to Peggy's Cove on a ship tour and the second time, we walked the waterfront and saw downtown.  I enjoyed both trips by sea and my later one by land.  It's a beautiful city!


Wednesday, January 7, 2026

The Price is Right Live on stage in Vancouver!

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026 

Don't be fooled by this.  This is NOT the TV show.  It's a commercial venture and you pay to get in.  I checked it out and one ticket costs CAD $194.39 for a good seat and $57.00 for the nose bleeds.  The Orpheum theatre seats 2,672 people.  On the show I saw they picked 7 people.  Your chances of getting picked are 0.262%!  

If you want to see it, by all means buy a ticket.  I, however, will watch it every day on television.  If you want to see the Canadian version of The Price is Right that was just filmed in Toronto, it will be broadcast on City TV in Canada starting in March.  The host is Howie Mandel and everything is Canadian.  I am looking forward to watching a Canadian version of this long run game show.

Here is the link if you want to check it out: 

Ticketmaster

Beware:  there are ticket resellers that are charging a lot more!

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Lessons from Venezuela - Canada will never break

I don't usually get political, but with what's transpired in the last few days, I thought I would share this.  Charlie Angus is a former Canadian Member of Parliament, journalist, broadcaster and musician.  I have read his articles before and I like what he stands for and believes in.  Here is his latest article:

So now it’s out in the open: the “Don-roe” Doctrine. Trump portrays the invasion of Venezuela an update on the 19th century Monroe Doctrine. Nope. It’s just a gangster shakedown applied to global relations. Donald Trump is a klepto-criminal, a man whose career was made through his ties with Russian mob money. He just isn’t hiding his intentions anymore. At the press conference following the kidnapping of President Maduro and his wife, he bragged that he was sending a message to the world.

“American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned again.”

This invasion had nothing to do with toppling an unpopular regime or restoring democracy. Trump said he will not allow the democratic opposition of Venezuela to assume power. Despite blowing up boats and murdering people in the water, it had nothing to do with dealing with drugs. Remember how Trump pardoned the former president of Honduras for drug running?

This was about taking control of the nation’s resources.

“We will secure our borders. We will stop the terrorists. We will defend our citizens against all threats foreign and domestic… This operation should serve as a warning to anyone who would threaten American sovereignty.”

Venezuela posed no threat to American sovereignty unless Trump was attempting to claim that Venezuelan oil belonged by right to the United States.

Welcome to the age of gangster fascism.

Long before Trump noticed Venezuela, he was establishing a narrative of Canada that portrayed us a drug/terrorist threat to the United States.

FBI director Kash Patel warned of the need to protect the US border from hundreds of terrorists coming from Canada. Not true.

Homeland Security Director Kristi Noem has claimed that the “northern” border was a funnel for criminal gangs from El Salvador. Not true.

Trump tried to portray Canada for being a global fentanyl threat. Not true. He claimed that fentanyl is a weapon of mass destruction – you know what that means.

Over the last year, I have working hard to explain how such language is being used to further a new kind of political ideology of shakedown and menace. I called it gangster fascism.

Ben Meiselas host of the Meidas Touch, stated that the reason he began interviewing me was because I was the first public figure to use the term. I’m not sure if that is correct but I have been warning that this combination of criminal kleptocracy and the authoritarian dismantling of the rule of law has made Trump 2.0 a serious danger on our border.

It is the danger posed by a gangster fascist regime.

Interestingly, as soon as I began to drop the F-bomb (fascism) in public I found myself ghosted by Canada’s national media. It has been almost a year that I was last invited on one of the CBC or CTV panel discussions.

Listening to the evening panel discussions with the bright talking heads who parse politics in our country you would think that Trump was just being Trump and that there were more important things to focus on such as the latest poll numbers about Pierre Poilievre months after the election was over.

One night coming back from a concert in Toronto I was on a packed subway and ran into two parliament hill journalists. For six subway stops they hit me with question after question about why I was using this kind of language and what I thought I was trying to achieve.

I finally asked them why they were so interested in my work given that I was never interviewed on any of their shows.

“Well, what if you are wrong?” one journalist said boldly.

I replied, “Wrong? I hope and pray that I am wrong. But you wouldn’t be peppering me with questions at midnight on a packed subway car if you thought I wrong.”

Yes, I really wish I was wrong. But the invasion of Venezuela is a manifestation of this gangster ideology.

But in watching the Trump press conference I can see how the Don-roe Doctrine crash and burn.

Trump’s global designs will fail through hubris, overreach and sheer bombastic aghast. His arrogance and lack of historical perspective is a crack that runs through everything in MAGA. As Leonard Cohen reminds us, “there is a crack in everything and that’s how the light gets in.”

For example, he thinks that shakedown and insult makes the United States strong. He fails to recognize that traditional diplomatic power of the United States is a much more compelling lever.

Traditionally, Canada would do almost anything to avoid a confrontation with the United States. It would meant a careful dance of coded diplomatic language with our much larger neighbour. Compromise would eventually found. But Trump’s relentless insults and denigration of our national character have taken away those options.

When he pushed the Canadian people into the corner, we came out swinging and we have been taking the fight to the MAGA economy ever since.

And we are now much tougher than we were just a year ago. Canada is the front line in the resistance to the MAGA ideology.

As for our western allies? Previously, they would bend themselves into pretzels to avoid a confrontation with the United States. But Donald Trump is forcing them to find serious backbone. On the day that Venezuela was invaded Katie Miller, wife of Stephen Miller posted an image of Greenland draped in the stars and stripes and boasted “SOON.”

NATO, the western allies, Asia are learning that there is no choice but to stand up to the bully.

Trump brags that kidnapping Maduro is sending a message to the world. He has but it is not the message he thought. This is a nation that is more isolated and weaker than ever. The rest of the world is pulling away and working hard to build resilient alliances.

As for Venezuela?

Good luck trying to run a country with the express purpose of stealing their resources. Trump given the Venezuelan people no choice but to resist. His gang of loud mouths haven’t thought the implications of occupying a country that refuses to bend to his will. The long-term implications for the United States will not be good.

There is no going back from this moment. I really wish I was wrong about the nature of the threat, but I am confident that this threat can be faced down. Trump has stripped away the mask. We see American power as it is – a shakedown kleptocracy. Canadians will do what we must do to resist.

I encourage the Prime Minister to move on the promise of a 300,000-person civilian defence force. I know Canadians will continue holding the line. We can build on the boycott and with our democratic allies increase the pressure MAGA. They didn’t expect the little guy who fight back but then Trump has no idea of our long history standing up to fascists. FAFO.

We will survive one day longer than the gangster and with the incredible solidarity we have shown, we will emerge one day stronger.

Charlie Angus

Monday, January 5, 2026

February 2026

This coming February 2026 will likely never happen again in your lifetime. Because this coming February will have:
    • 4 Sundays
    • 4 Mondays
    • 4 Tuesdays
    • 4 Wednesdays
    • 4 Thursdays
    • 4 Fridays, and
    • 4 Saturdays.



Sunday, January 4, 2026

Cruises impacted by the attack on Venezuela

Air space over Venezuela has been closed since November 29th.  As of yesterday airports in the Caribbean countries listed below are closed.  Anyone in any of the southern Caribbean islands is stranded.  This is the weekend most holiday travellers return home!

Virgin Voyages just announced their January 3rd sailing of the Valiant Lady will not stop in Aruba and Curacao.  They are replacing those stops with Barbados and St. Lucia.

Puerto Rico is an embarkation port for cruises.  Many people are stranded in San Juan and can't return home.  Others cannot get to their ship as the airports are closed.  These ships are scheduled to depart San Juan:

Sat. January 3, 2026:

  • Emerald Azurra
  • Jewel of the Seas
  • Valiant Lady

Sun. January 4, 2026:

  • Grand Princess
  • Brilliance of the Seas
  • Norwegian Epic
I am trying to find out how the cruises are helping their stranded passengers and so far this is all I can find.  All I can say is, ALWAYS PURCHASE INSURANCE!:

Princess:

If you have made independent flight arrangements and have not booked Princess Vacation Protection, please contact the Princess En Route Desk so they can inform the ship of your delays.  (They will get you to the next port at their expense)!

 

Princess En Route Desk Contact Info:

 

Within the U.S. or Canada, please call 1-800-545-0008.

 

Outside of the U.S. or Canada, please call 1-661-284-4410.

 

Within Australia, please call 13 24 88.

 

If you have booked Princess Vacation Protection and have made independent flight arrangements (have not booked Princess EZair®), call the travel assistance provider under the plan:  Within the U.S. or Canada: 1-877-303-5909.


Virgin Voyages:

We understand that ongoing flight disruptions may prevent some Sailors from joining us for our next departure from San Juan. Any Sailor who is unable to embark due to this situation will receive a full future voyage credit to use on a future Virgin Voyages sailing.

If you need assistance with your voyage or are experiencing impacts to your travel plans, our Sailor Services team is ready to help. View their ‘contact us’ page.  Please note that we are currently experiencing higher-than-average wait times, and we appreciate your patience and understanding as our team works through each case.

I didn't book with Princess EZ Air for my next cruise as I'm using air miles.  I usually book with Princess EZ Air because if there are any problems, they protect you.  I checked my insurance.  Bel Air Direct formerly Johnson Medoc:

A cancellation or delay of you or your travel companion’s common carrier resulting from:

the mechanical failure of that common carrier;

a traffic accident;

an emergency police-directed road closure;

weather conditions;

flight delay; or grounding of your air transportation, when the cancellation or delay causes your or your travel companion’s trip to be cancelled or interrupted, or when your or your travel companion’s connection, cruise or tour is missed.

Note: This covered reason does not apply if alternative travel arrangements can be made

They would cover the air and the cruise if we were stranded and couldn't make other arrangements!  

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Diana Fox Carney

Canadian media doesn't follow our first ladies around like they do in the US.  Mila Mulroney and Sophie Gregoire Trudeau did a lot of volunteering and work they never got recognition or thanks for.  Diana Fox Carney is a very well educated lady.  She does so much behind the scenes and I thought I would share this article.  Whether you like her husband or not, you must commend her for what she is doing with no pay, no thanks and no publicity!

Diana Fox Carney working quietly behind the scene; If you’ve been paying even a little attention to Canadian public life this December, you’ve probably noticed that Diana Fox Carney has been quietly but unmistakably everywhere she needs to be. Not in a, look at me way. More in a well, obviously this is where the work is way.

Take the holidays. While many of us are negotiating with tangled lights, dry turkeys, and the existential dread of mall parking lots, Diana was in Ottawa supporting Toy Mountain with The Salvation Army, the kind of initiative that reminds you what public service looks like when it isn’t filtered through rage tweets or culture-war nonsense. It’s practical. It’s human. And yes, it involves making sure kids actually get toys, not just speeches about kids getting toys.

That’s sort of her brand. She’s there to support her husband, Prime Minister Mark Carney, of course, but not as a background prop or ceremonial ornament. She shows up as herself: engaged, informed, and clearly allergic to performative fluff. If you were expecting a PMs wife whose primary contribution is smiling politely beside a wreath, you may want to adjust your expectations.

Because this is also the same Diana Fox Carney who, just a few months ago in September 2025, spoke at the United Nations on the rights of Ukrainian children. Let that sink in for a moment. While some public figures struggle to string together a coherent sentence without a teleprompter and a grievance, she was addressing one of the most serious humanitarian crises of our time, bringing attention to children displaced and traumatized by war.
No drama. No grandstanding. Just substance.

And then there’s the climate work. This is where her long-standing expertise really shows. Diana has spent years immersed in climate policy, sustainability, and green economic strategy. So when she talks about green economies, she’s not reading off cue cards written by a staffer who Googled climate stuff the night before. She understands how environmental responsibility and economic growth actually intersect, something Canadian politics desperately needs more of.

What’s refreshing is how naturally all of this fits together. Holiday charity work. International human rights advocacy. Climate and sustainability leadership. None of it feels forced or scattershot. It feels like the continuation of a life spent doing serious work, just now on a larger stage.

And somehow, despite the packed schedule and global stakes, she manages to keep it human. You can imagine her at Toy Mountain gently redirecting someone who’s overthinking the donation process: It’s a toy. For a kid. You’re doing great. That kind of energy.

There’s also something quietly reassuring about seeing someone who isn’t trying to outshine the Prime Minister, or disappear behind him, but instead complements the role with competence. Mark Carney may be steering the ship, but Diana is very clearly helping chart the course, especially on issues that will define Canada’s future long after this government is done.

In a political era obsessed with outrage, branding, and viral nonsense, her presence feels… normal. In the best possible way. Serious work, done thoughtfully, with a bit of warmth and humanity thrown in.

Honestly, this is what Canada looks like in 2025, Diana rolling up her sleeves, talking climate, advocating for children, and still finding time to help Santa’s logistics, we could do a lot worse.

And maybe, just maybe, that’s the point.

Diana Fox Carney Is More Than the Prime Minister’s Wife And Canada Should Pay Attention

With Mark Carney’s election win keeping him in the Prime Minister’s Office, Canadians are getting a clearer look at the woman standing beside him. Diana Fox Carney may be introduced in headlines as the prime minister’s wife, but that framing undersells her in ways that feel both outdated and intellectually lazy.

Fox Carney is an economist in her own right, an environmental advocate, and yes, a lifelong hockey player. That combination alone should disqualify her from the usual ornamental treatment political spouses often receive. She isn’t a background figure smiling politely on a stage. She’s a professional who has spent decades working on climate policy, sustainability, and economic systems that actually function in the real world.

During the 37 day federal campaign, Fox Carney was a constant presence on the trail. Not as a silent accessory, but as a visible partner. On election night, she didn’t just stand behind Mark Carney, she introduced him. And what she offered wasn’t rehearsed fluff. It was a grounded, human portrait of a leader shaped by curiosity, humour, and a long standing commitment to public service.

Her remarks mattered because they reinforced something increasingly rare in politics, credibility. Fox Carney spoke not as a campaign surrogate but as someone who has known Carney since their days as graduate students. Thirty years of shared life gives you a front row seat to whether someone’s values are performative or real. Her confidence in him didn’t feel manufactured. It felt earned.

What’s also striking is how Fox Carney embodies a modern model of political partnership. She hasn’t abandoned her own identity to prop up her husband’s career, nor has she turned herself into a brand. She exists comfortably in her own expertise, which quietly reinforces the idea that leadership doesn’t require ego dominance, it requires competence and trust.

Canada would do well to resist reducing Diana Fox Carney to a symbolic role. Her background in economics and environmental advocacy aligns with some of the country’s most pressing challenges. Whether or not she ever chooses to play a more formal public role, her presence alone signals something important about the tone of this government.

She isn’t there to soften edges or smile on cue. She’s there because she belongs there. And that, frankly, is refreshing.

Another erudite essay from the talented PEI Writer, Artist & Musician, Marcel Arsenault

Balderson Cheese

  I bought Kraft cheese until I read on the package, "Processed Cheese Food"!  I immediately stopped buying it and just looked it ...