morning meeting

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A spell of insomnia had its sweet rewards yesterday morning. As the northeast sky behind the mountains began to glow in orange and scarlet, I stepped out on the deck to breathe in the fresh calm air, listen to the quiet and watch the changing sky. What a glorious way to meet the morning, imagining being the only person on this spot on earth.

Up the street, I see a car slowly approaching, stopping at some of the houses, then ours. Here comes our newspaper. It’s 5:15 in the morning, husband will be getting up any minute. Another work day ahead.

Happy 139th birthday, Canada!

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On this Canada Day, we have pomp and ceremony in Ottawa, parades, musicals events and fireworks in many communities and many vacationers at cottages and campgrounds. We’re at home awaiting family guests, some from the US too. The weather is too hot, body and brain feel mushy, so I leave you with a few links to peruse about Canada.
About Canada’s national anthem
How Canada got its name
Garry Gaudet’s irreverent look at our marriage of convenience with US , who is also celebrating a birthday on July 4th.
“some sobering reading for both Canadian and American alike on this holiday weekend” by Thunder Bay, Ontario blogger Peter.
LATER: Erika writes about a special CBC-TV documentary: The Canadian Guitar. I forgot about that, so thanks for the reminder, Erika.
Guess what language this Canadian anthem is – thanks to mirabilis.

Victoria Day

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We’ve just had a long weekend here in Canada. Victoria Day is a Canadian Statutory Holiday celebrated on the Monday on or before May 24 in honour of both Queen Victoria’s birthday and the current reigning Canadian Sovereign’s birthday. While Victoria Day is often thought of as a purely Canadian event, it is also celebrated in some parts of Scotland where it is also a public holiday.

And what did we do? Lots of puttering about the home front, mainly gardening until the rains came to give us and the parched plants some relief from last week’s heat, then a much-needed start at clearing out husband’s cluttered and sawdusty workshop so that it can at last be finished properly with drywall and storage cupboards. Not a holiday per se… Looking at the archives, I was reminded that we were working pretty hard two years ago. Do you see a pattern here?

Canadian books

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Canadian publisher McClelland & Stewart is celebrating 100 years and has put out their Essential 100 list of books: “Selected from the 700 plus M&S backlist titles currently available, our Essential 100 consists of those titles that  should be on every Canadian’s bookshelves.”

I found it very interesting to check out how many I’ve read and how very many more I still want to read. How many of these have YOU read and which one is your favourite? Let me see, my favourite…there are so many.. Jane Urquhart’s Away, Rohintron Mistry’s A Fine Balance, Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient… it’s impossible to choose and Canada has so many fine authors. And, if you are a Canadian resident, you may enter a contest to win these Essential 100 titles. I would need more bookshelves!

I don’t buy many novels, preferring to use the library, but I do have a LOT of art books, including a few M&S publications on Canadian artists:
1. Tom Thomson:The Silence and the Storm, Harold Town and David Silcox, 1977.
2. Pellan, Germain Lefebvre 1973
3. Contemporary Canadian Painting, William Withrow 1972
4. The Group of Seven, Peter Mellan, 1970
5. Sculpture of the Eskimo, George Swinton, 1972 (George Swinton was one of my instructors at the University of Manitoba School of Art, and he was well-known for his large collection and his scholarship at a time when interest in Inuit art was barely beginning.)

Artists in Our Midst 2006

Artists on the west side of Vancouver are once again opening their studios to the public:

West Point Grey April 21-23
Kitsilano April 28-30
Dunbar/Kerrisdale May 5-7

Each Friday there is a preview night with entertainment in a local centre. Then on Saturdays and Sundays the artists will be at their studios welcoming visitors. Check out the schedules, the participating artists and their addresses at the very informative site for Artists in Our Midst.

One of the founders, Pnina Granirer has been the subject of several pieces here, as has Olga Campbell. There sure are a lot of artists to visit in this lovely area of Vancouver at the most beautiful time of year!

spring!

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Some spring flowers from my garden to you, dear readers, on this first day of spring!

Well, this year the vernal equinox was gorgeous in Vancouver! Three days of glorious sunshine after a long cold and wet spell, quite the opposite of last year. We’ve been outdoors every day, walking and taking photos with our new camera. Yesterday and today we’ve also been doing garden cleanup. Ooh, our backs are sore but we feel great from all the fresh air and physical work. We made the most of the first days of spring for tomorrow the rains return. Happy Equinox!

WET!

Weather is a popular subject as it affects everyone. Well, our suffering has been rewarded! Vancouverites can now boast that two records have been broken!

One is for the most rainy days in a given month, that is 29 of 31 days this January. Secondly, Vancouver also broke a record for amount of rainfall in the city during any January, that is 283.6 millimetres (11.165 inches) at the airport. The North Shore gets much more, though I haven’t seen the numbers yet, and the mountains have lots of snow.

We almost broke a similar record earlier this winter, but the weather improved for just that one last day that was to break the record. It was amazing how upset Vancouverites were! I suppose it’s a desire for a reward for surviving. Now we can be happy. Welcome to the rainforest. Let’s go count the snowdrops now as we await sunny spring days.

Gung Hay Fat Choi!

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Happy New Year, that is the Chinese Lunar Year!

… old debts will be settled, new clothes purchased and homes cleaned and decorated to ring in the New Year with a fresh start. Families gather on the eve of the holiday, which lands on a Saturday this year, to hold a large feast and honour their ancestors. Over the following two weeks, people visit friends and relatives, bringing gifts of sweets, fruits and red envelopes stuffed with money. People also visit fortunetellers to seek insight into what the new year will hold. While many of the traditional customs are no longer commonly practised here in Canada, it remains a time for family gatherings and gift-giving. (more in the Vancouver Sun)

The greater Vancouver area has the third-largest Asian population in North America, after San Francisco and New York. More than 400,000 ethnic Chinese live in British Columbia. Many Chinese-Canadians fly to their homeland for the Lunar New Year, which typically begins with the new moon and ends two weeks later with the full moon.

Vancouver’s Chinese cultural history began with the 1858 British Columbia gold rush and the subsequent building of the trans-continental railway in the 19th century. Those workers and their descendants built Chinatown just east of what is now downtown Vancouver.

This year’s 2-hour parade starts at noon Sunday and winds through Chinatown, chiefly on Pender and Keefer streets. Its headquarters site is at Chinatown Plaza (180 Keefer St.), where events continue until 4 p.m. (from the Bellingham Herald)

Here’s a list of special events in Vancouver and Richmond. (Richmond is a suburb south of Vancouver and has become a kind of modern Chinatown with the more recent immigrants.)

And these are interesting: about Chinese calligraphy and leslee’s great links on this Year of the Fire Dog – my year, too!

(The image above is of an exquisite Chinese paper-cut given to me as a gift once – I know, it’s supposed to be a dog this year, but I didn’t have one! No cultural offence intended.)

a trip with friends

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As I mentioned in the last post, our good friends from Denmark arrived last week for a visit! After a day of sightseeing in Vancouver, including a visit at the Museum of Anthropology, we packed up the car and headed over to Vancouver Island. The ferry from Horseshoe Bay to Nanaimo is always a pleasant way to begin a holiday with the wonderful mountain, island and ocean views.

As we drove west, we made stops at Cathedral Grove for a walk amongst the magestic old growth giant Douglas firs, and for lunch in the town of Port Alberni.

Our destination? Our favourite cabin retreat on the edge of the Pacific Ocean near Pacific Rim National Park. We had variable weather from a gorgeous sunset the first day, and a sunny morning the day we left. One afternoon and evening it rained very heavily, so we had a bit of everything, and we had a fabulous time with lots of long beach and rainforest walks!

On one wild beach, I even had an unexpected huge wave suddenly wash over my feet up to my knees in spite of a mad getaway run up the sand. I laughed with exhiliration even though I was aware in the back of my mind, and then by my husband’s concern, that I was very lucky I wasn’t pulled in by the undertow! Amazingly my wet feet inside my waterproof boots did not feel cold until much much later when we returned to our cabin.

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Connie and Jorgen fell in love with this area and understood why it’s a favourite place of ours which we visit so often (as I wrote about in 2004 and 2005.) We returned home happy and a little tired last night. Very early this morning we exchanged sad goodbyes bolstered by our happy shared memories.

Now I’m catching up slowly, beginning with a trip to the studio this morning to get my thoughts back to my art after a month off. At home I still have Christmas decorations to take down and pack up. The holidays, though wonderful, are now over and life is returning to normal – a good thing.

P.S. – Photos of this great week, all 150 or so beautiful ones, were taken by my husband!

Christmas stars & rain

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Arctic cookie star. Photo by Bernard P. Hanby

Just in time for Christmas, a Christmas Stars Gallery! There’s a stunning range of starfish below the water off the West Coast of BC. Here’s a sampling of photos by Bernard P. Hanby, courtesy of The Tyee.

For a sense of the feeling of a West Coast Christmas, or not, do read this beautiful post by Chris Corrigan, who lives on an island just beyond Vancouver. As a northerner and a prairie girl, I can identify with what he so eloquently says, much better than I could. Only by turning inward to focus on the lights, food, family and nostalgia do I still manage to capture the Christmas feeling.

Here’s hoping you have captured the Christmas spirit! Merry Christmas everyone!