Friday, June 19, 2026

Robert Bateman


Cec and I went to Victoria in May 2013 to see the new Robert Bateman Gallery.  To our surprise, he was there.  We purchased his book, which he autographed and let us take a picture with him.  We've always loved his art work.  He's a very talented Canadian.

Robert Bateman is one of Canada’s most extraordinary wildlife painters. He also happens to live in Saanich-Gulf Islands!  He recently celebrated his 96th birthday and still paints daily.

Elizabeth May, Member of Parliament for Saanich Gulf Islands presented a petition calling on the government to speak with the National Gallery and encourage them to showcase the lifetime work of Robert Bateman.

The mandate of the National Gallery is to showcase artists who contribute significantly to Canadian culture and identity. Mr. Bateman’s work meets this standard in every way, yet it has never been exhibited at the National Gallery.

If you want to see his work in the National Gallery, please sign this petition:


Robert Bateman Honours and awards


Thursday, June 18, 2026

Legends

 

I rarely watch thriller movies or series. They’re usually too dark, too frantic, or simply not my style. But every now and then, something keeps popping up in reviews, in conversations, in those little corners of the internet where people whisper, “You have to watch this.” That’s exactly how I ended up pressing play on Legends — and I’m so glad I did.

Legends is a British crime‑thriller series written and created by Neil Forsyth and produced by his Tannadice Pictures company. What sets it apart is that it isn’t just another fictional drama about undercover agents. It’s a dramatization of a true story — one that unfolded quietly behind the scenes in the early 1990s, when Her Majesty’s Customs and Excise was losing its battle against drug smuggling across Britain’s borders.

Faced with a crisis, a small, hand‑picked team of customs employees was given new identities and sent deep undercover to infiltrate some of the most dangerous drug gangs operating in the country. No glamour. No Hollywood gloss. Just ordinary people stepping into extraordinary danger because someone had to.

The cast is exceptional: Steve Coogan, Tom Burke, Hayley Squires, and Aml Ameen bring a grounded, human realism to the story. Their performances make you feel the tension, the fear, the moral weight, and the strange loneliness of living a life that isn’t yours.

And here’s the part that surprised me most: It was one of the best series I’ve seen in a long time.

The writing is sharp, the pacing is tight, and the story never drifts into sensationalism. Instead, it honours the real people who took enormous risks to protect their country — people most of us have never heard of.

For someone like me, who rarely dips into thrillers, Legends was a reminder that sometimes stepping outside your usual viewing habits leads you straight to something remarkable. If you’re looking for a series that’s gripping, intelligent, and rooted in true events, this one is absolutely worth your time.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

A wonderful lunch with high school friends

Yesterday was one of those simple, good-for-the-soul days. Cec and I headed over to Victoria with my friend Donna for a long‑overdue visit with Janice and Jim. The four of us—Donna, Janice, Jim, and I—went to school together many years ago, and no matter how much time passes, there’s something comforting about slipping back into those old friendships. Seeing them again felt like opening a window to a familiar breeze.

Our day started at Tsawwassen, boarding the ferry for the beautiful crossing to Swartz Bay. No matter how many times I take that route, the scenery never gets old—the islands, the light on the water, the quiet hum of the ship. From Swartz Bay, we hopped onto the 72 Double Decker bus, riding like tourists and enjoying the view all the way into Sidney.

It was just a day trip, but it carried that lovely feeling of reconnecting—with friends, with memories, and with the easy rhythm of Vancouver Island life. Sometimes the best days are the ones that unfold simply: a ferry ride, a bus ride, and a table shared with people who knew you when you were young.

We walked the waterfront to Jack's on the Water.

Lunch with old friends always feels like slipping into a favourite sweater—comfortable, familiar, and full of good memories. The five of us settled in and ordered a mix of dishes that turned out to be as delightful as the company. Janice, Jim, and Cec all chose the halibut fish and chips, perfectly golden and crisp. Donna went for the fish tacos, and I had the salmon, which was cooked beautifully. Every entrĂ©e was excellent, and the service matched it—friendly, attentive, and relaxed, just the way a long lunch with friends should be.

After we finished catching up over our plates, Jim kindly drove us back to the ferry terminal. The sailing home was wonderfully calm, the kind of smooth crossing that lets you just sit back and enjoy the view. We didn’t spot any whales this time, but I did see a fish leap out of the water—a tiny moment, but it made me smile. Two elegant sailboats glided past as well, their white sails bright against the blue. It was the perfect quiet ending to a day filled with connection and nostalgia.

Some days don’t need anything extraordinary to make them special. Good friends, good food, and a peaceful trip home can be more than enough.










Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Prince Edward Duke of Edinburgh


Prince Edward turned down a dukedom on his wedding day — and then waited twenty-four years to receive the one he actually wanted.  When he married in 1999, the convention was clear: sons of the monarch become dukes upon marriage.  His brothers had become Duke of York and (later) Duke of Cambridge would follow for William.  Edward instead took the lesser rank of earl, choosing a territorial name reportedly inspired by a character in the film "Shakespeare in Love."

Behind the modest choice sat a remarkable promise.  Buckingham Palace announced that he would eventually be granted the Duke of Edinburgh title — his father's — but only after Prince Philip's death and only when the title reverted to the Crown. It was, in effect, an inheritance announced decades in advance, dependent on the decisions of a future monarch who was not yet on the throne.

Philip died in 2021.  The title passed first, by law, to Charles as his eldest son.  When Charles became King in 2022, the question became live: would he honour a promise made by his mother a quarter of a century earlier?

On March 10, 2023 — Edward's 59th birthday — the answer came.  The King conferred the dukedom on his youngest brother, for Edward's lifetime only. Sophie became Duchess of Edinburgh.

The man who took the smallest title in 1999 now carries the one most closely associated with his father, awarded as a birthday present by his brother.  Patience, in this family, is occasionally rewarded — it just takes a generation.

Monday, June 15, 2026

From Liquid Paper to MTV!

A divorced single mom got fired from her bank secretary job in 1958.  Twenty-one years later she sold her side hustle for $47.5 million — and her teenage helper went on to invent MTV.

Her name was Bette Nesmith Graham.

Born in Dallas in 1924, Bette was a high school dropout. She married a soldier named Warren Nesmith at 19, gave birth to a son named Michael in 1942, and watched her marriage collapse when her husband came back from World War II.  By 1946 she was a 22-year-old single mother with no diploma, no career, and no plan.

She earned her GED in night school.  She took a typing job.  By 1951, she was the executive secretary to the chairman of the board of the Texas Bank and Trust in Dallas, earning about $300 a month.  She was good at her job.  She was also a terrible typist.

The Texas Bank had just installed brand new IBM electric typewriters.  The keys were sensitive.  Carbon-film ribbons left ink that could not be erased cleanly. A single typo could mean retyping an entire page from scratch.  Her son Michael later remembered watching his mother sit at the kitchen table in the evenings, trying to fix mistakes, sometimes bursting into "tears of panic" over the fear of being fired.

Bette had one side hustle that saved her: she earned extra money painting holiday window displays at the bank.

One day, watching herself paint over a mistake on a window — calmly, with a little brush, no eraser needed — she had a thought.

"An artist never corrects by erasing," she said later.  "They paint over the error."

That night she went to the public library, looked up a recipe for tempera paint, and went home to her kitchen blender.  She mixed up a thin white liquid. She poured it into an empty nail polish bottle.  She tinted it to match her bank's stationery.  She brought it to work the next morning with a small watercolor brush.

When she made a typo, she dabbed a little white paint over it, let it dry, and typed right over the spot.

Her boss never noticed.  For five years.

But her fellow secretaries did.  They asked her for some.  Then their friends asked.  Then strangers from other offices started showing up.  By 1956 she was making batches in her kitchen and selling them out of nail polish bottles.  She called it Mistake Out.  Her son Michael — by then 14 years old — and his friends filled the bottles in the garage for a dollar an hour.

In 1958, she got fired.

She had absent-mindedly typed her own company's name — Mistake Out Co. — onto a letter for her boss.  He sent her packing.

It turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to her.

She renamed the product Liquid Paper, patented it, and devoted herself to it full time.  A 1958 mention in a trade magazine called The Office brought in 500 inquiries from across the country.  General Electric placed an order for 400 bottles in three colors — four times her entire monthly production.  By 1968 she was selling a million bottles a year. By the mid-1970s, 25 million bottles a year.

She built her headquarters in Dallas and ran it the way she wished her old bosses had run things.  The Liquid Paper Corporation had an on-site library.  An on-site child care center for her employees' kids.  She filled management with women.  She integrated her staff. She hired employees with disabilities, including blind workers and wheelchair users.  She drew her org chart as a circle, not a pyramid.  She paid for 75% of any employee's continuing education.  She let employee committees vote on company decisions.

It was the late 1970s. Most of corporate America was decades behind her.

Then in 1975, her second husband, Robert Graham — whom she had married in 1962 and brought into the business — divorced her and tried to push her out of her own company.  He changed her formula.  He cut off her royalties.  Bette, sick and exhausted, fought back and held onto a 49% stake.

In 1979, with her health failing, Bette sold Liquid Paper to Gillette for $47.5 million in stock — about $173 million in today's money — plus a royalty on every single bottle sold for the next twenty years.

Six months later, on May 12, 1980, she had a stroke and died.  She was 56 years old.

Half of her fortune went to two foundations she had built to support women in business and women in the arts.  The other half went to her son.

That son had spent his teenage years filling Liquid Paper bottles in her garage.  By the time of his mother's death, he was already famous — but for something else entirely. His name was Michael Nesmith.  He was the wool-cap-wearing guitarist of The Monkees, one of the biggest pop groups of the 1960s.

What happened next is the part nobody tells.

Michael took his Liquid Paper royalties and used them to fund a small experimental TV show he had dreamed up — a show that played short promotional films set to popular songs.  He called it PopClips.  It aired in 1980 and 1981 on a cable network called Nickelodeon.

PopClips was the direct prototype for MTV, which launched in August 1981.  Industry historians credit Michael Nesmith's work with helping invent the modern music video format that would transform pop music for the next thirty years.

So the next time you see an old Liquid Paper bottle in a desk drawer, remember:

A divorced single mother who got fired from her secretary job for being a bad typist invented a kitchen-blender solution, built one of the most progressive workplaces in 1970s America, sold her company for nearly fifty million dollars — and her son used the money to help invent MTV.

Bette Graham proved something her old boss had failed to notice for five years.

The mistakes weren't the problem. They were the opportunity.
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Sunday, June 14, 2026

FIFA Vancouver 2026

 

The 2026 FIFA games in Vancouver have started.  The first game was last night.  We heard downtown was very busy but we never went near it.  I loved seeing all the Australians who flew to Vancouver to watch their team they call the Socceroos!  There are also a lot of Turkiye fans.

Let's hope there is no problems and all the fans have a great time.  

There are watch parties for those who didn't get tickets in many areas around Vancouver.  We went to a pub for dinner and it was busy!  It's great for all the restaurants and bars!






Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Dollar Store

I know three Dollar Stores near me have been closed because of a rat infestations!  Someone put on Facebook, "when you go to the Dollar Store, look at the bread, if it has been chewed on, don't buy it!"  That kept me away for months!  I've never bought any food at the Dollar Store!   I knew about electronics and safety concerns but the other items are interesting.  I usually just purchase stationery and greeting cards.

Dollar stores in Canada can be convenient for inexpensive items, but it's not worth the risk or repeated replacement.  By avoiding these items, you can prevent safety hazards, reduce repeated spending, and ensure better quality for essential products.  For safer alternatives, consider reputable brands or specialty stores for electronics, health products, and durable household items.

Here are 13 items to avoid:

  1. Batteries – Off-brand batteries often wear out quickly, leak, and can damage electronics, especially in cold Canadian winter.  
  2. Phone chargers and cables – Low-quality wiring and insulation can overheat, fail, or even pose fire hazards.
  3. Medications and supplements – Storage conditions may degrade potency, and labels may lack clear dosage or allergy information.
  4. Electronics – Earbuds, radios, clocks, and Bluetooth devices often break quickly due to poor soldering and fragile components. 
  5. Knives and cutting tools – Cheap steel loses sharpness fast, increasing the risk of injury.
  6. Toys for young children – Small parts, poor construction, and choking hazards make some dollar store toys unsafe.

  7. School supplies like pencils, scissors, and markers – Low durability means they may not last the school yea 
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  8. Canned or packaged food – Items may be near expiration or improperly stored, affecting quality and safety.
  9. Chocolate and temperature-sensitive snacks – Heat exposure can cause spoilage or staleness .
  10. Holiday lights and electrical decorations – Poor insulation and low-quality wiring increase fire risk 
  11. Cheap kitchen utensils – Rubber spatulas, plastic tools, and other utensils may break quickly, making them a false economy 
  12. Cosmetics and nail polish – Low-quality ingredients can cause skin irritation or degrade quickly 
  13. Party favors and small plastic toys – Often break easily and may contain unsafe materials, especially for children 

Robert Bateman

Cec and I went to Victoria in May 2013 to see the new Robert Bateman Gallery.  To our surprise, he was there.  We purchased his book, which ...