Thursday, March 31, 2022

Nexus pass

We originally had a Pace sticker and when they introduced Nexus we immediately applied for it.  If you don't know what Nexus is, it's a joint Canada Border Services Agency and US Customs and Border Control program.  It's designed for pre-approved, low-risk travellers.  When you travel by car there are dedicated lanes so the wait is minimal.  If you fly there is a function you can add to get TSA Pre-check that expedites you through airport security.  The cost is US$50 for five years.  If you cross the border frequently, it's well worth it.

Every five years you need to renew.  My card was going to expire at the end of the year.  I've been told if you let it expire you must reapply.  Previously when our card was about to expire we made an appointment for an interview and had another security check.  A friend applied for renewal before COVID and is still waiting for his appointment.  The website said for renewals to apply up to a year ahead of time so I applied on March 20th.

Yesterday I got an email from US Customs and Border Protection that said my "status" had changed.  I thought maybe it was cancelled!  It was approved for five years with TSA Pre-check!   No appointment, no new card and tomorrow the required antigen test for return to Canada has been discontinued.

I'll wait until the border lineups are short and look forward to cross border shopping.  


Wednesday, March 30, 2022

French military using winged warriors to hunt down rogue drones


A golden eagle grabs a flying drone during a military training exercise at Mont-de-Marsan French Air Force base, Southwestern France.

Following incidents of drones flying over the presidential palace and restricted military sites – along with the deadly 2015 Paris terror attacks – the French Air Force has trained four golden eagles to intercept and destroy the rogue aircraft.

Aptly named d'Artagnan, Athos, Porthos and Aramis – an homage to Alexandre Dumas' "The Three Musketeers" – the four birds of prey have been honing their attack skills at the Mont-de-Marsan in southwestern France since mid-2016.

"A drone means food for these birds," Gerald Machoukow, the military base's falconer, told FRANCE 24. "Now they automatically go after them."

The use of hunting birds – normally falcons and northern goshawks – by militaries around the globe is common practice in the fight to scare other critters away from runways and so cut the risk of accidents during takeoff or landing. But it wasn't until 2015 when the Dutch started using bald eagles to intercept drones that other militaries started to see the benefit of these winged warriors

The French bred the four golden eagles – three males and one female --  sing artificial insemination since eagles are a protected species and harvesting wild eggs is strictly forbidden. They chose the golden eagle because of the birds hooked beak and sharp eyesight.

Also weighing in around 11 pounds, the birds are in a similar weight class as the drones they're sent to destroy and clocking in at a top air speed of 50 miles per hour, with the capability of spotting its target from over a mile away, the eagles are deft hunters. To protect the eagles from drone blades and any explosive device that might be attached to them, the French military designed mittens of leather and Kevlar (an anti-blast material), to protect the bird's talons.


A golden eagle carries a flying drone (2017). "I love these birds," Machoukow told Agence France-Presse. "I don't want to send them to their death." The birds are first taught to attack in a straight line before graduating to diving from heights. Soon they'll be patrolling the skies over the Pyrenees Mountains in southern France and could possibly be deployed at airports and special events, such as political summits and soccer tournaments. The French air force already expects four more eagles to join the fleet.



Tuesday, March 29, 2022

European shopping bags

As our city has stopped all free bags, I have a few reusable bags.  Mine are boring compared to these:











Monday, March 28, 2022

Oscars

Every year I enjoy watching the Oscars.  Some years I record it and watch it later without the commercials.  Last night we watched it live.  I enjoyed the three female hostesses.  All of them are talented in their own right.  The dresses and tuxes are great to see too.

The tribute to those who passed away was well done.  The choir was a nice change.

Then, Chris Rock came on.  He's always a little over the top but tonight Will Smith's reaction will be one of the most watched clips.  I saw Jada's reaction but what Will did was unforgivable.  Thanks to the PVR, we replayed it a few times and my lip reading filled me in.  I did get a copy of it on You Tube (see below, if you are interested in listening to his vulgar remarks).  He should be charged with assault, but you know if you have money you can get away with anything.  If it was an unknown person who punched Chris Rock, security would have apprehended the offender and called the police. Donald Trump said it.  He could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and get away with it.  Money and fame is all you need in the US to act without consequence. 

Chris Rock at the 2022 Oscars

I was very sorry to see Liza Minelli in a wheel chair.  I thought Lady Gaga looked fantastic.  We only went to the movies four times this year and saw West Side Story, The Eyes of Tammy Faye, No Time to Die and House of Gucci.  We have Netflix so I'll watch The Power of the Dog.  We will probably wait for the others to come to Netflix or Prime.  

It will be interesting if Will Smith will pay for his temper tantrum.  Personally, I hope he's held accountable for his despicable behavior.  Chris Rock handed it very well.  

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Farmer's see things so clearly

I became confused when I heard the word "Service" used with these agencies:

Internal Revenue  'Service'

Postal  'Service'

Telephone  'Service'

Cable TV  'Service'

Civil  'Service'

Municipal, City, & Public 'Service'

Customer  'Service'

This is not what I thought 'Service' meant. But today, I overheard two farmers talking, and one of them said he had hired a bull to 'Service' a few cows.

 BAM!!!  It all came into focus. Now I understand what all those agencies are doing to us.

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Read the press release from our Provincial Government

“This rebate is going to help a lot of people in this province,” said Mike Farnworth, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General. “This is another opportunity to put money back in the pockets of the hardworking people who make this province a great place to live.”

The announcement today from our beloved Premier is an insult to everyone who drives in British Columbia.  He announced every driver will get a one time rebate of $110.00 to compensate for the high price of gasoline.  We pay the highest gas prices in North America.  $0.73 cents of each litre of gas is tax and our government is increasing the gas tax on April 1st.  So they figure if they give us each $110 that will help.  To make it even more absurd, people with electric cars get this big $110 rebate!  

I have never paid more than $100 for gas because I never let my car go below half a tank.  I'm sure it would be $200 for a fill!  I drive an SUV gas guzzler and I can afford gas.  What about the working people who drive to work every day?  This said it will help them put money back in their pockets?  WHAT!!!!  I doubt $110 would fill a compact car.  Why don't they reduce the gas tax so the people with a long commute would benefit most?

Who was genius thought this rebate would help offset our huge gas prices and make us forget we are getting yet another tax increase in a week?

RIDICULOUS



Friday, March 25, 2022

Spring break fun

I remember when I was a little girl going downtown with my grandmother to Woodward's.  When Cheryl was small my mom took her downtown on the bus.  Cheryl had never been on a city bus.  She said to my mom "when does the lady bring your lunch"?   Cheryl had only been on airplanes and of course that's what she was referring to.  

Lexie never goes on public transport either as her mom and dad drive everywhere.  We took her on a few Skytrain trips instead of driving in the car.  She loved it!

Many years ago on Skytrain at spring break
This year for spring break we asked if she wanted to come to Victoria for the day.  She said she would enjoy it and the weather has not cooperated.  So on Thursday with a good weather forecast, off we went.  We parked at the Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal and walked on the ferry.  When we arrived at Swartz Bay there are two buses into the city.  The number 70 is the express.  The number 72 takes the long route through Sidney and Saanich and ends at the Legislative Buildings.  We took the long route and were at the front of a double decker bus.  It was a beautiful trip.

After a nice lunch at the Old Spaghetti Factory in the former Crystal Gardens, we walked to the B C Legislature.  We joined the 2PM tour.  We've done it before but it was really nice to take Lexie.  Lots of children on spring break.
The legislature reconvenes on Monday
We went for a nice long walk along the waterfront and into the city.  It was a lovely spring day. 
The cherry blossoms were everywhere and lovely.  Lots of spring flowers too!

A big thumbs up to this fellow flying the Ukranian Flag.  Check out the horse and carriage in the intersection.

The Empress Hotel

You can't go to Victoria without a trip to Rogers Chocolates
We bought a nice box of chocolates for Lexie.  Then walked through Chinatown and back to catch us bus back to the ferry terminal.  This time we took the number 70 bus.  There was a lot of traffic problems and thanks for the ferry being 30 minutes late, we made the ferry back to Tsawwassen.  

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Word Play Fun

1. Dad, are we pyromaniacs? Yes, we arson.

2. What do you call a pig with laryngitis? Disgruntled.

3. Writing my name in cursive is my signature move.

4. Why do bees stay in their hives during winter? Swarm.

5. If you're bad at haggling, you'll end up paying the price.

6. Just so everyone is clear, I'm going to put my glasses on.

7. A commander walks into a bar and orders everyone around.

8. I lost my job as a stage designer. I left without making a scene.

9. Never buy flowers from a monk. Only you can prevent florist friars.

10. How much did the pirate pay to get his ears pierced? A buccaneer.

11. I once worked at a cheap pizza shop to get by. I kneaded the dough.

12. My friends and I have named our band ‘Duvet’. It’s a cover band.

13. I lost my girlfriend’s audiobook, and now I'll never hear the end of it.

14. Why is ‘dark’ spelled with a k and not c? Because you can't see in the dark.

15. Why is it unwise to share your secrets with a clock? Well, time will tell.

16. When I told my contractor I didn't want carpeted steps, they gave me a blank stare.

17. Bono and The Edge walk into a Dublin bar and the bartender says, “Oh no, not U2 again.”

18. Prison is just one word to you, but for some people, it’s a whole sentence.

19. Scientists got together to study the effects of alcohol on a person’s walk, and the result was staggering.

20. I'm trying to organize a hide-and-seek tournament, but good players are really hard to find.

21. I got over my addiction to chocolate, marshmallows, and nuts. I won't lie, it was a rocky road.

22. What do you say to comfort a friend who’s struggling with grammar? There, their, they’re

23. I went to the toy store and asked the assistant where the Schwarzenegger dolls are and he replied, “Aisle B, Back.”

24. What did the surgeon say to the patient who insisted on closing up their own incision? Suture self.

25. I've started telling everyone about the benefits of eating dried grapes. It’s all about raisin awareness.

 

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

North to Alaska

 

We have a seven day cruise booked for the end of June to Alaska with Lexie and then I find this:

VOYAGE & PASSENGER DETAILS

Voyage: 1214 Departs: 02MAY22 Returns: 14MAY22 Nights: 12 Ship: ROYAL PRINCESS

From: Vancouver, Canada To: Vancouver, Canada

Itinerary: Vancouver, Canada - Juneau, Alaska - Skagway, Alaska - Icy Strait Point, Alaska - Sitka, Alaska - Hubbard Glacier Scenic Cruising - Glacier Bay National Park - Endicott Arm and Dawes Glacier - Ketchikan, Alaska - Victoria, Canada - Vancouver, Canada 

Passenger 1

Passenger 2

Total

Fare

1,726.25

1,726.25

3,452.50

T,F&PE*

406.29

406.29

812.58

Total Fare

           2,132.54

             2,132.54

               4,265.08


This price is for an aft balcony and includes the premium beverage package, wi-fi and tips.  If you want to remove the beverage, wi-fi and tips it's $1,246.94 per person plus taxes.  Prices are in Canadian dollars and subject to change.  This is a resident special and is $100 Canadian a day!!!!   What a deal.  The itinerary is unique as most Alaska cruises only see one glacier, this one sees THREE.  

If you want to join us, call or email me at:  lfisher@maritimetravel.ca



Monday, March 21, 2022

Marital Bliss?

I just realized this year will be our 55th wedding anniversary!  Usually we plan a nice trip for our anniversary but thanks to Princess for cancelling my dream vacation to Australia, it will have to wait.  

We have a lot of humour in our marriage.  We laugh a lot and it helps the hard times.  My husband sends me jokes all the time, and I thought I would share what he sent me today:










He thought these were really funny.  I just go along with it.....😍

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Chrystia Freeland, Canada's Deputy Prime Minister & Minister of Finance

When I watched our Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland's response to the war in Ukraine, I was amazed at her speech.  She has articulated Canada’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with the resolve and assuredness of someone who looks like she has been preparing for this moment for a very long time.

It is no act. No one in the Canadian political class has studied Russia, or its now pariah president, more than Ms. Freeland. As a student of Russian history at Harvard and exchange student in Kyiv in the 1980s. As the Moscow correspondent for the Financial Times in the 1990s. Or, since 2015, in her successive roles as Canada’s minister of international trade, foreign affairs and finance.

“There are moments in history,” Ms. Freeland said on Monday, “when the great struggle between freedom and tyranny comes down to one fight, in one place, which is waged for all humanity.”

Her five-minute speech overshadowed that of her boss, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and went viral on social media. Like her other pronouncements on Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military assault on Ukraine, it stood out from the boilerplate recrimination uttered by many politicians. It was personal, thoughtful and stated with conviction.

If Mr. Putin has confounded many Western leaders, Ms. Freeland seems to have had his number for some time now. She has never bought the narrative of Mr. Putin as a nationalist leader seeking to restore Russia to imperial or great-power status, suggesting rather that he has used that ruse as a cover for his own insatiable appetite for power and wealth.

“All the talk of a mystic Slavic brotherhood, of feelings of national humiliation, of responding to the threat posed by NATO and standing up for a multipolar world has done its job. It has also obscured what Putin really wants. He is a dictator whose thirst for power has eroded the economic prosperity his rule had hitherto partly rested upon.  Foreign conquest is an obvious distraction and substitute,” Ms. Freeland wrote in Britain’s Prospect magazine in 2014.

Ms. Freeland’s Ukrainian roots – her grandparents immigrated to Canada in 1948 and her mother helped write the country’s constitution after it won its independence in 1991 – have undeniably shaped her own views on Russia and Mr. Putin.

When she was named foreign affairs minister in 2017, some experts worried Mr. Putin would see the move as a provocation. He had slapped an entry ban on her and 11 other Canadian politicians and senior bureaucrats after Canada placed sanctions on Russia following its 2014 annexation of Crimea. Ms. Freeland ended her predecessor Stéphane Dion’s efforts to seek a rapprochement with Russia and championed the adoption of Canada’s Magnitsky Act, enabling the sanctioning of foreign nationals for corruption or human rights violations. The law has come in handy now.

While at Foreign Affairs, however, Ms. Freeland was principally preoccupied with a different threat than Mr. Putin to the rules-based international order – specifically then-U.S. president Donald Trump, whose disdain for multilateralism had scrambled postwar global institutions.

She has had more success in persuading reluctant European allies to embrace far tougher sanctions on Russia and Mr. Putin than they had initially been prepared to accept, including a freeze on the foreign assets of the Russian central bank. The freeze effectively prevents the bank from intervening in foreign-exchange markets to shore up the ruble, which has plunged to a record low.

According to a Reuters report, Ms. Freeland directly addressed Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov and central bank governor Elvira Nabiullina during a Feb. 18 meeting of Group of Twenty finance officials, warning the duo not to doubt the resolve of “like-minded democracies” to punish Russia if it invaded Ukraine. Politico reported on Sunday that Ms. Freeland had spent much of last week “pushing the idea of sanctioning the central bank” among her Group of Seven colleagues.

It would be an exaggeration to suggest Ms. Freeland was alone responsible for the West’s adoption of economic sanctions on Russia that few people, or even Mr. Putin himself, thought possible. But, on this issue, Canada does appear to have exerted substantial influence on its peers.

“What we are seeing here from Vladimir Putin is an attempt to have his cake and eat it, too. He wants to behave like a communist dictator, but he and his entourage had thought they could do that and continue to enjoy all of the fruits of global capitalism,” Ms. Freeland explained on Tuesday. “And what the world decided really, really clearly last week and then particularly this weekend, is you don’t get to do that.”

In 2014, following the Crimean annexation, Ms. Freeland, then a backbench Liberal MP, warned: “To secure his power at home, Putin has tested its limits abroad. Whether it is in Ukraine, or elsewhere, one day we will have to stop him.”

Fate, or something like it, seems to have put her in the right place at the right time.  
If you want to hear a history of Ukraine, I found this great nine minute You Tube.  

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nK-yJD_fAtknt

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Life is like a camera.....



Life is like a camera

Focus on what's important

Capture the good times

Develop from the negatives

and if things don't work out

take another shot 

Friday, March 18, 2022

The Sounds of Silence


I really enjoyed Simon and Garfunkel.  This story makes me like them even more:

Hello Darkness My Old Friend, a Simon and Garfunkel song inspired by a College roommate who went blind -  reveals an untold story.  Enjoy and then listen to the song itself.

One of the best-loved songs of all time. Simon & Garfunkel's hit The Sound Of Silence topped the US charts and went platinum in the UK.  it was named among the 20 most performed songs of the 20th century, included in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, and provided the unforgettable soundtrack to 1967 film classic The Graduate. But to one man The Sound Of Silence means much more than just a No 1 song on the radio with its poignant opening lines: "Hello Darkness my old friend, I've come to talk with you again."

Sanford "Sandy" Greenberg is Art Garfunkel's best friend, and reveals in a moving new memoir, named after that lyric, that the song was a touching tribute to their undying bond, and the singer's sacrifice that saved Sandy's life when he unexpectedly lost his sight.  "He lifted me out of the grave," says Sandy, aged 79, who recounts his plunge into sudden blindness, and how Art Garfunkel's selfless devotion gave him reason to live again. 

Sandy and Arthur, as Art was then known, met during their first week as students at the prestigious Columbia University in New York.  "A young man wearing an Argyle sweater and corduroy pants and blond hair with a crew cut came over and said, 'Hi, I'm Arthur Garfunkel'," Sandy recalls.  They became roommates, bonding over a shared taste in books, poetry and music.  "Every night Arthur and I would sing. He would play his guitar and I would be the DJ. The air was always filled with music."  "Still teenagers, they made a pact to always be there for each other in times of trouble. "If one was in extremis, the other would come to his rescue," says Sandy They had no idea their promise would be tested so soon. 

Just months later, Sandy recalls: "I was at a baseball game and suddenly my eyes became cloudy and my vision became unhinged. Shortly after that darkness descended." Doctors diagnosed conjunctivitis, assuring it would pass. But days later Sandy went blind, and doctors realized that  glaucoma had destroyed his optic nerves.

Sandy was the son of a rag-and-bone man. His family, Jewish immigrants in Buffalo, New York, had no money to help him, so he dropped out of college, gave up his dream of becoming a lawyer, and plunged into depression. "I wouldn't see anyone, I just refused to talk to anybody," says Sandy. "And then unexpectedly Arthur flew in, saying he had to talk to me. He said, 'You're gonna come back, aren't you?'  "I said,: 'No, There's no conceivable way.' "He was pretty insistent, and finally said, 'Look, I don't think you get it. I need you back there. That's the pact we made together: we would be there for the other in times of crises. I will help you'." 

Together they returned to Columbia University, where Sandy became dependent on Garfunkel's support. Art would walk Sandy to class, bandage his wounds when he fell, and even filled out his graduate school applications.  Garfunkel called himself "Darkness" in a show of empathy. The singer explained: "I was saying, 'I want to be together where you are, in the black'." Sandy recalls: "He would come in and say, 'Darkness is going to read to you now.' "Then he would take me to class and back. He would take me around the city. He altered his entire life so that it would accommodate me."

Garfunkel would talk about Sandy with his high-school friend Paul Simon, from Queens, New York, as the folk rock duo struggled to launch their musical careers, performing at local parties and clubs. Though Simon wrote the song, the lyrics to The Sound of Silence are infused with Garfunkel's compassion as Darkness, Sandy's old friend.  

Guiding Sandy through New York one day, as they stood in the vast forecourt of bustling Grand Central Station, Garfunkel said that he had to leave for an assignment, abandoning his blind friend alone in the rush-hour crowd, terrified, stumbling and falling. "I cut my forehead" says Sandy. "I cut my shins. My socks were bloodied. I had my hands out and bumped into a woman's breasts. It was a horrendous feeling of shame and humiliation. "I started running forward, knocking over coffee cups and briefcases, and finally I got to the local train to Columbia University. It was the worst couple of hours in my life."  

Back on campus, he bumped into a man, who apologized. "I knew that it was Arthur's voice," says Sandy. "For a moment I was enraged, and then I understood what happened: that his colossally insightful, brilliant yet wildly risky strategy had worked." Garfunkel had not abandoned Sandy at the station, but had followed him the entire way home, watching over him. "Arthur knew it was only when I could prove to myself I could do it that I would have real independence," says Sandy. "And it worked, because after that I felt that I could do anything. 

"That moment was the spark that caused me to live a completely different life, without fear, without doubt. For that I am tremendously grateful to my friend." Sandy not only graduated, but went on to study for a master's degree at Harvard and Oxford.  
While in Britain he received a phone call from his friend - and with it the chance to keep his side of their pact. Garfunkel wanted to drop out of architecture school and record his first album with Paul Simon, but explained: "I need $400 to get started." Sandy, by then married to his high school sweetheart, says: "We had $404 in our current account. I said, 'Arthur, you will have your cheque.' "It was an instant reaction, because he had helped me restart my life, and his request was the first time that I had been able to live up to my half of our solemn covenant."

The 1964 album, Wednesday Morning, 3 AM, was a critical and commercial flop, but one of the tracks was The Sound Of Silence, which was released as a single the following year and went to No 1 across the world. "The Sound Of Silence meant a lot, because it started out with the words 'Hello darkness' and this was Darkness singing, the guy who read to me after I returned to Columbia blind," says Sandy.

Simon & Garfunkel went on to have four smash albums, with hits including Mrs. Robinson, The Boxer, and Bridge Over Troubled Waters. Amazingly, Sandy went on to extraordinary success as an inventor, entrepreneur, investor, presidential adviser and philanthropist. The father of three, who launched a $3million prize to find a cure for blindness, has always refused to use a white cane or guide dog. "I don't want to be 'the blind guy'," he says. "I wanted to be Sandy Greenberg, the human being"

Six decades later the two men remain best friends, and Garfunkel credits Sandy with transforming his life. With Sandy, "my real life emerged," says the singer. "I became a better guy in my own eyes, and began to see who I was - somebody who gives to a friend. "I blush to find myself within his dimension. My friend is the gold standard of decency."  Says Sandy: "I am the luckiest man in the world"

Hello darkness, my old friend
I've come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence

In restless dreams I walked alone
Narrow streets of cobblestone
'Neath the halo of a street lamp
I turned my collar to the cold and damp
When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
That split the night
And touched the sound of silence

And in the naked light I saw
Ten thousand people, maybe more
People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening
People writing songs that voices never share
No one dared
Disturb the sound of silence

"Fools" said I, "You do not know
Silence like a cancer grows
Hear my words that I might teach you
Take my arms that I might reach you"
But my words like silent raindrops fell
And echoed in the wells of silence

And the people bowed and prayed
To the neon god they made
And the sign flashed out its warning
In the words that it was forming

And the sign said, "The words of the prophets
Are written on the subway walls
And tenement halls
And whispered in the sounds of silence"

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

The good news, then the bad news

Over a year ago, I put a deposit on a 29 day cruise from Vancouver to Sydney, Australia.  The reason I booked this cruise was because the Royal Princess is a nice ship that I've sailed before.  It visits four ports in New Zealand and has some great ports in the South Pacific!

Australia and New Zealand have been closed to cruise ships for two years, then Australia released this:


My cruise isn't until the end of September so New Zealand should end their cruise ban by then too.   Yesterday, I got this email from Princess:

Dear Linda, our valued guest,

As we carry on working with various government and port authorities to finalize our plans for a return to cruising around the world, we continue to face uncertainty regarding port access and ongoing international travel restrictions. It has therefore been necessary to make several changes to our future deployments, and regretfully we have cancelled your cruise.

There are two replacement cruises.  One ship is 20 years old and both only go to Auckland in New Zealand.  The Royal Princess was going to three more New Zealand ports!  I've had another cruise booked from Sydney to Melbourne, and I cancelled it.  I had a seven day trip from Sydney to Cairns to see the Great Barrier Reef and I will cancel it too.  The coach tour from Melbourne to Adelaide along the great ocean road and Kangaroo Island will also need to be cancelled!   I couldn't work any of these tours into the replacement cruises. 

The Royal Princess will be based in San Francisco in September for the winter.  



Tuesday, March 15, 2022

The Gilded Age

If you haven't heard or seen The Gilded Age, I highly recommend it!  It's a drama series on television on HBO in the US and Crave in Canada.  It is written by Julian Fellows of Downton Abbey fame.   Christine Baranski, Cynthia Nixon and Louisa Jacobson (Merle Streep's daughter!) are just some of the stars.  The costumes and set are amazing!  

The American Gilded Age was a period of immense economic change of great conflict between the old ways and the brand new systems, and of huge fortunes made and lost.  It begins in 1882.   I had a hard time following it at the beginning because of the many characters.  I've come across these You Tube videos that make it easier to place all the characters.  

Meet the Van Rhijn Household

Meet the Russell Household





Sunday, March 13, 2022

Mask or no mask?


Yesterday we went to Walmart where 80% of the customers were wearing masks.  It wasn't busy and I was very surprised to see so many people still in masks.  I read in Alberta when masks were not mandatory anymore, it was much different.  One person went into a store and the checkout clerk said "it's over, why would you still wear a mask?".  The gentleman said "my wife has COVID".  Apparently the clerk immediately put a mask on!

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Job's Daughters

In the 60\s, I was a member of Job's Daughters. It gave me confidence and made me the woman I am today.  Tuesday, March 8th was International Women's Day and this was posted on Facebook.  

Today, on International Women’s Day, we proclaim our pride of our Job’s Daughters heritage. It is so appropriate that this day falls during the week when we honor our founder, Ethel T. Wead Mick. In 1920, Mother Mick, saw a need for girls to understand the basics of democracy, parliamentary procedure, and government in general. She was active in the women’s right to vote movement, and even incorporated the suffragette movement’s colors of purple, gold and white into the regalia of Job’s Daughters. In this photo of women demonstrating for the right to vote, you can see how much the suffragettes may have influenced Job’s Daughters. 

Today, our meetings empower girls to become leaders. Our meetings follow Robert's Rules of Order. Girls as young as 10 years old stand and make formal motions, debate issues on the floor, and vote for the good of the organization. In this way, we help teens learn the power of their voice and their vote, so they can be effective citizens and leaders of the world. Our members plan their own activities and decide their own path; we are truly girl-led, with adults present only to guide and assist. 

Bethel #1 is especially proud to be the place where it all began. From Omaha to the rest of the world, Mother Mick’s vision of helping girls become strong leaders continues to thrive. 

Our members are going out in the world “filled with ambition and hope.” Go out and change the world!

#DaughtersYouWillRise

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Happy Birthday Lexie!

 

Lexie designed and helped bake and decorate the three angel food cakes and many cupcakes.  To carry it into the gymnastics party room it was on a piece of plywood!

Seventeen years ago, I was in the delivery room with Dave when Lexie was born.  Watching her grow up has been magnificent.  She asked me not to post pictures of her on my blog, but the picture above was taken long before that request!

In Grade 8 she was on the honour roll and has always remained there.  She loves animals, is musical and has a love for travel.  Her true passion is acting.  

With her parents approval, she is coming with us on the Discovery Princess in the summer to Alaska.  I've booked a shore excursion to Carcross so she can see the Canadian north.  I'm thrilled she still wants to travel with us.  We celebrated with her on Monday at her favorite sushi restaurant.  She celebrated with her friends at Milestones on Saturday night.  

Happy 17th Lexie!

Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Wonderful pictures

  This is where the great wall of China ends.

A FedEx Boeing 757, without any cargo

This is the clearest photograph of Mercury that has ever been taken.

These things are octopus eggs.

What the Northern Lights look like from space.

Bavarian town of Nordlingen built in a 14 million year old meteor impact crater

This is an illustrated grocery list Michelangelo would create for his illiterate servants.

 This is a view from Mars.

Inside one of Googles data center Mechanical Systems .

A look at Hitler 's office.

These are the teeth of George Washington.

A ginormous statue of Genghis Khan in Mongolia .

 A comparison showing fat vs muscle.

 This is the desk of Albert Einstein just a few hours after his death.

 This is Daytona Beach in 1957.  

Climbers going up Mount Everest in 2013.

Cancer cells under  microscope.

 Bagger 288, the largest land vehicle in the world.  

An aerial view of a tire dump.  

 A zoomed in view of the human tongue.

A huge dust storm just before it hit Australia in 2013.

A geyser just barely before it erupted.

A cross-section of an undersea cable

Steveston

  We moved to Steveston in 1976 and lived there for 34 years.  We had a house built in a new area because it was the cheapest place to build...