Sunday 23 December 2007

Two weeks takes me into December in Victoria - busy!

As always, feel free to comment on this blog at the bottom; I love feedback. :-) Also, you can start at the beginning of the blog here or follow the links on the left, organized by date.


Nov. 18 & 19th: Starting out the week

Sunday, well... that was a restful day. Sort of. I spent the day relaxing, off work.

Monday: work time, of a different sort. My parents & descended on our storage unit, to sort through boxes and pick out some more essential items, which we packed into a rental SUV( a Ford Freestyle ). It was a cold day, and the storage unit was unheated... so after spending 4 hours there I was chilled and hungry, with what felt to be the start of a cold I'd picked up last Saturday; lovely. We packed the car to half-full and unloaded it at the condo, then spent the rest of the day doing grocery & other shopping at the various area malls, more easily reachable by car. I also managed to snag the cell phone I'd been waiting for, the new LG Shine Gold flip phone. It must have been my lucky pot of cold, as we saw a double rainbow at sunset tonight.

I couldn't locate the Olympus camera I'd purchased from eBay, and needed to return to the seller for a refund( after I disputed the fact that it was 'perfect', a long and protracted email argument resulted in arbitration through PayPal that was to end with my return of the camera for a refund... but it's MISSING ). In fact, the whole box it was in is missing... and since there was no item manifest for the movers( Multicites )to sign off on, I can't produce any evidence to get a refund. So, that sucks, I'm out a fair chunk of cash and( most galling of all )the seller on eBay gets away with selling a defective camera... and keeps my money. Life's not fair, kiddies... so take all the precautions you can, or you'll find yourself one day wondering how you got a hole in your wallet.

Nov. 20th & 21st: The head cold sets in... and my articles are published!

I worked both days, feeling miserable and blowing my nose every 5 minutes... all day long. But I stuck with it, and vowed to purchase some nice lotion-packed kleenexes on the way home. On a BRIGHTER note, BOTH of my articles that I had submitted last week to Informit.com were accepted, without ANY alterations, and for a NICE sum of cash - lovely! Too bad they don't have a timeline for being published... and that my head hurts too much from the cold to celebrate.

Nov. 22 & 23rd: Suffering from my cold, but persevering.

I stayed in bed for both mornings until I had to get for the closing afternoon shifts; the cold has, of course, socked it to me. It was a nice sunny day here in Victoria, and quite a few flowers are still blooming along the way to work. Too bad I couldn't smell them.

Nov. 24 & 25th: Soldier on. Skype, then brunch the next day.

I opened the store on Saturday, which was an experience. Did I mention that though I lot of things are the same with NMM here in B.C., there's a LOT more paperwork that they seem to LOVE doing? I'm not a fan, if you couldn't tell. At least I finished work early Sat. and could spend the evening resting up until I chatted with my friends in Niagara using Skype; it was a blast, though I was really, really tired after 90 minutes of fun talking to them all at Pierre's place. The 3-hour time difference does make things tricky to schedule though.

My parents & I had Sunday Brunch at Samuel's Restaurant next door, only a few steps away. It is a lovely restaurant, with top-notch service and impeccable food. We had to make reservations, and it was quite crowded, but things run smoothly there and it was a pleasure to dine at such an establishment... despite the cost. Having someone ALWAYS notice that your tea needs topping up, or whisks away plates right after you're done, is indefinably comforting. The best part? The brunch was paid for by our landlord Kevin, as an apology for the various small annoyances we'd experienced at the condo over the last few weeks. How nice!

Nov. 26th & 27th: Two Days OFF

My cold seems to be fading, and these two days off should help kick the little buggers out of my system permanently. I spent the Monday making a TON of calls about rentals, hoping to find the perfect place... or at least an acceptably affordable one. Turns out that Victoria hasn't had its rental market expand much at ALL in the last 20 years, so the turnover rate is low; it's really a landlord's market, so they can be both picky AND pricey in many cases. While I was originally looking for a two-bedroom unit, I soon found that these were both scarce and pricey, so much so that the few decent ones I did find were either already taken, or had major things wrong with them... heck, a lot of them were just too damn pricey to even consider without a roomie... which negates the storage and guest benefits of a second room altogether. My mother's been a great help in the search; being retired, she's been scouring ads from many sources to find those few that fit my needs. It's helped cut down on the number of calls I've made considerably.

Tuesday the 27th, I saw a few places, but again there was nothing I'd be happy to call 'home' - I'm not picky, but having a kitchen where I can place my flat palms on ALL four walls is a little too cozy for my tastes; I can't cook in a closet, thanks. On a more interesting note, there was a minor earthquake( a 3.3 ) in the late evening, which caused a large mirror to fall off the wall in the front entry... on top of a glass table, no less! Miraculously, neither the mirror OR the table shattered, or even cracked - considering that the HUGE mirror had been held up by a tiny little hook in the drywall, that was amazing all over again. Needless to say, it stayed on a solid shelf elsewhere.

On a lighter note, my sister called to say she was quitting her job at the art gallery in Banff. The stress was simply too great, and though the owners were nice folks, they apparently just can't bring themselves to take the pressure off my sister to do more sales... so she's quitting before she has a fit at work. Can't say I blame her, though it's a shame, as she's said she loves most of the other aspects of the job. She's got a new job already though, at a high-end spa, so we're relieved and happy for her.

Nov. 28th & 29th: My Dad's Birthday... and I bought a BIG TV! Doh - my wallet...

I just worked on the Wednesday; too tired to do much else. More and more I know that I'll have to get some physical activity scheduled for the spring, once I find a place to live. It's been a lot of work so far, day after day, in getting things DONE even AFTER the move here to B.C. ... I've definitely lost weight, as well as sleep. I'm hoping to get more of the latter and gain none of the former once things settle down and I can just RELAX for a time, get some writing done... *sigh*

The 29th was a BUSY day. I viewed an AMAZING condo today, right down by the bayshore on the west side of Victoria, near the Johnson St. bridge. It was called the Mermaid, and it was so fantastic I would have given half of several vital body parts to be able to live there. It was a HUGE one-bedroom place( sizedfor 2 bedrooms, but only 1 was built.. so the main room was BIG! )with stainless steel appliances, in-suite laundry, a soaker tub and heatlamp in the bathroom and a TON of storage. It even had a SPIRAL STAIR that led to a rooftop terrace that was the size of the ENTIRE condo's footprint - amazing, with an amazing view from the top floor across the bay! Sadly, it was $1500.00 CAN a month PLUS utils, so there was NO way I could even dream of affording it.

I took my parents across the street to the Canoe Brew Pub for a nice birthday lunch for my dad( he turned 60 today )though the beer as usual gave me a headache instantly( even the nicer microbrews do this; allergies perhaps? ). They went over to view a nice place across the bridge in Esquimalt... and fell in love with it. The building is all white-painted steel and glass, consisting of sweeping curves and floor-to-ceiling windows in a design that looks like a cruise ship on land. All of which costs a fortune, which is why they are going to rent the place; no sense in stretching themselves to invest, as it limits their future mobility.

I zoomed over to Future Shop to check out a deal on an LG HDTV that seemed too good to be true: buy the 42" TV and get an Xbox360 Elite tossed in FREE! Skeptical, I had been checking the specs on the TV for the past week, and found it was a top-end model from many, many reviews and owner's write-ups. I prepared for my trip today by filling a USB key with a bunch of 1080p high-def images, to test the TV in-store. Armed with the key and some other info, I tested several of the TV's on the store's sales floor, collecting a large crowd of store staff around me in the process; apparently nobody else had ever bothered to test a flatscreen TV while still IN the store, BEFORE buying...! Nuts if you don't, if you ask me.... 'cuz the first TV I tested had a dead pixel, spotted right off the bad - saved a messy return right there! *grin* I was quite satisfied with the TV's image after a half-hour of testing, and bought it on a no-interest Future Shop card deal... which was the ONLY way I was giving them my money, thanks... too many bad experiences at the St. Catharine's F.Schlock over the years had soured me somewhat. The staff at the Victoria store were VERY nice though, friendly and knowledgeable... and soaked up the HDTV info I was spouting as I tested the TV. All in all, a good time.. then I went to work. *sigh*

Nov. 30th & Dec. 1st: Work, work, work... and work some more.

Friday the 30th was boring; all I did was work after dragging myself out of bed to PLAY WITH MY NEW TELEVISION! It was delivered not long after 10 am, and to my horror the delivery guy was carrying the large box BY HIMSELF, pressing the flat against the bump of his shoulder....!! With visions of a cracked screen, I quickly unpacked the TV and found to my utter relief it was unharmed by the idiot. Whew! I let it warm up for a half hour while I unpacked the Xbox360, then plugged them both in and ran their setup routines. I was playing Forza Racing before noon while the new dishwasher was being installed behind me, thanks to Kevin. Nice! Leaving for work for the evening was hard, but I knew the TV would still be there in the morning...

Saturday, the 1st of December I spent playing with the TV. Yep, it's that simple. The colours are great( after tweaking of course! ), the sound is good ... I've run a ton of tests, and the picture comes out with( pardon the pun )flying colours! I walked over to the Bay Centre and purchased a few games( used of course! )from EB Games... Halo3, as well as Mass Effect and BioShock. All of which promise to be great-looking games at 1080p on a 42" screen... *drooling* Ah, tech.

My parents went out in the evening with a new local friend by the name of Pat, who through amazing coincidence is part of the Victoria Welcome Wagon group AND knew my mother in high school back in Niagara! They went to see the annual Island Truck Light Parade( see the pictures at their website here )which is a popular tradition here in Victoria every winter. It was too wet out, and I was both too tired and still trying to shake my cold, so I stayed home and comforted myself with my TV... a little. Amusingly, there is a Fireplace Channel through Shaw Cable here, so I called that up and had hot chocolate while reading by the fire... with the REAL( well, gas )fireplace on as well. Quite warm and cozy, all in all - a nice end to a hectic and tiring two weeks.


Hope you're enjoying this blog folks... I certainly am while writing it. :-) Merry Christmas!!!

Saturday 15 December 2007

The Second Week in Victoria: Lots and lots to tell...

My second week in Victoria was rather stressful, and I ended up catching a cold by the end of it from some helpful stranger, likely one at work. As always, you can comment on this blog at the bottom - I keep wondering if anyone's actually READING this thing....? ALL previous Blog enries have been updated as of today with Links - images will be next, I hope, in a week or two.

Nov 11th - Remembrance Day

We drove through Beacon Hill Park today in the rental Pontiac G6, the last day we had it. I took a lot of pictures, as the sun peeked out here and there from the overcast sky to give a few good photos. The park is very large, larger than the sizable Bourgoyne Woods back in St.
Catharines, and since it sits in the middle of the south end of Victoria, the city surrounds the park but does not intrude on it. Tall trees cover about a quarter of the land, with winding roads and paths meandering through the vast spaces. A good portion of the park is undeveloped wilderness, with great rock prominences jutting through the grass like the bones of the earth itself. Some areas, like the ones where I saw 4 peacocks, are planted as beautiful flower gardens, while another area contains a large pond surrounded by willow trees. A gorgeous park, the south end of which overlooks the ocean straight and gives amazing views of the Juan de Fuca Islands.

We saw quite a few folks out for Remembrance Day today as well, despite the weather. Quite a gathering was down at the Parliament Buildings on Government Street, and we saw many military uniforms returning home from that area as we finished our tour of the park. After returning the rental car, my parents and I had lunch at the
Bay Centre cafeteria, which is on the fifth floor of the Bay Centre and is quite large. The food is excellent, as are the prices, and included in the meal is a fantastic view to the west of Esquimalt, where my parents will be getting their retirement digs set up in a month or so - more on that later. The view of the harbour shows seaplanes taking off, as well as the ferry to the USA and other boating traffic.

Another nice thing about Victoria is that everyone seems to watch out for one another. The bus drivers actually SLOW DOWN when nearing each stop, even if all they see is someone walking towards the stop area - they slow, just in case that person is trying to catch the bus. And as I've already mentioned, everyone THANKS the driver when they leave the bus; it's great to hear. Even seeing people wait patiently in groups to cross almost-empty stretches of street is a treat; I keep expecting people to do the Niagara Falls dash-for-your-life-through-oncoming-traffic thing, and seeing people actually WAIT for the 'walk' signal, en masse, even with no cars in the immediate area, is still a source of fascination for me even weeks later.

Nov 12th - Stay Home Storm

A nasty pacific storm blew in today, revealing that our temporary quarters at the Landmark building are not all that well sealed against the weather. In particular, the door to the patio of the main bedroom had huge drafts of air blowing in around all four sides, so we sealed those with painter's tape temporarily. We also have noticed the tile floor in the kitchen is quite chilly, which we suspect is a lack of insulation in the walls. Another point is that the kitchen backs onto the second bedroom, and there is a complete lack of noise insulation in the wall - you can hear every drawer or cupboard close, utensils rattle or appliances running. I am very glad we haven't rented this place for more than the few months planned, for although it looks to be a lovely building and the trimmings are very nice, the guts of the place aren't very well thought out a'tall.

Needless to say, we didn't go much of anywhere today due to the storm, and a good thing too. While we didn't lose power here, the evening news revealed a lot of damage all over Vancouver Island - the heavily wooded Island meant a LOT of trees fell from the severe winds. Seeing as today was the second of FOUR days off in a row, I spent some of it sorting through things I had brought from the storage depot and just generally relaxing, as I've been very tired of late.

Nov. 13th - a Day Spent Shopping

A very quiet day again... I had received notice from Multicites Moving that the delivery would be taking place either today or tomorrow, so I was very grateful to my new co-workers for giving me these three weekdays off to get that taken care of. Unfortunately, nothing arrived today due to delays caused by that severe storm a few days ago - it played havoc with shipping schedules for the Vancouver Ferry, setting things back at least a day... of course.

So I went walking around Victoria instead, determined to get a better look at the place on foot. I wandered into the London Drugs store on Yates, and found a fantastic camera that I had been eyeing for a while. After having a better look at it, I bought it - a Fuji F50fd, a little pocket camera that packs a 12 megapixel SuperCCD, a large screen and a ton of features. While it cost a fair penny, it was nowhere near the SLR-range price insanity that seems the rage these days.

I also bought a 2-gig high-speed SD card for the thing too, to ensure I could snap pictures fast. Seeing as our last camera had started to severely malfunction a few weeks ago, I knew that I would be needing a new one, so my research pointed me to the Fuji above all others. Joy!

When I arrived home that evening, I discovered that Multicites had called; the shipment would finally arrive tomorrow. I was thrilled, as I had been stressing that the bad luck revolving around trying to ship our goods would keep true to form and result in its total loss in transit. Whew! I slept a lot better that night, let me tell you.

Nov 14th - Our Stuff Arrives

I went to the Budget Car Rentals just down the road with my mom at 8am to rent a nice SUV to use today once our things had arrived in a few hours. It was a nice Ford Freestyle, which had a ton of interior cargo room, lots of bells and whistles and drove like a brick, while looking like a squashed cousin to an SUV. At least it had heated seats, as it was quite chilly today.

We got a call from Multicites at 9am: they were en route from the morning ferry. We met them at the City Centre Storage depot on Johnson St a little after 10am; after some paperwork, they started unloading our stuff... which was no longer palletized - Strike One. I had organized our goods into seven distinct pallets, to allow easy shipping and distribution of important boxes on arrival - apparently that wasn't good enough for Multicites, which jumbled it all together... while damaging several DOZEN boxes in the process. The moving crew of three men were nice enough, but they were NOT careful with our boxes at all, even though we were right THERE watching them unload and directing certain boxes to be set aside for our SUV to take. I saw quite a few boxes CLEARLY marked 'Fragile!' in red marker all OVER the box simply tossed around and piled under other boxes marked 'VERY HEAVY' - can you say, DO NOT CRUSH?

It was rather stressful, and all this in the wet and cold too. I ended up paying a TON of money for these folks to mangle my goods, and LOSE several boxes in the process, conveniently one containing my Olympus camera, which was marked clearly on the box. I suspect that this was 'lost' intentionally along the way, but the last laugh is on the theif: the camera is defective, and while I had to eat the $200.00 cost through an eBay fiasco I won't get into, I am very slightly satisfied that the camera will NOT do whoever has it now any good. However, the flipside is that I have NO idea what ELSE was in that box, and never will likely know. My whole plan was to take pictures of the contents of EVERY box before it was sealed, as a record of the goods that we could use in case of loss in transit. Due to the failure of our old camera and severe time constraints at the tail end of October, this simply didn't happen - let that be a lesson to any of you who are going on a long move that will see your goods out of sight for weeks: TAKE PHOTOS! My shattered Visions pots, broken wine bottles and missing boxes are all proof that any idiot can move, but only a wise one will take precautions against other idiots messing it up. Given the MANY
negative reviews of Multicites I have since come across on the 'net, I am not bothering to claim anything with them, as very few people have had any results without a lawyer!

We packed and moved three SUV-loads of goods to take back to the Landmark; I had had the foresight to purchase a handcart from Canadian Tire for the move, but it was defective - the tires went flat in minutes, and since I was the only one capable of heavy lifting, I had to move ALL the boxes on my own. My parents could not do more that unpack the stuff once I hauled it to our condo, which was stuffed with vital necessities by day's end. I was exhausted by the whole experience, and went to bed early with thoughts of how I could have managed the move some other way dancing a nasty tap in my head. I hadn't come up with any solutions before sleep whacked me with a soft pillow.

Nov 15th - Wow, can it RAIN here in Victoria! But what if you have nowhere to sleep...?

When it rains here in Victoria, it tends to be a gentle sprinkle in the morning, followed by some clearer skies around noon, then some more rain in the late afternoon. Today was no different, save that the rain decided to skip the clear bit around noon and dump a load of water instead.

Which made me glad to have my umbrella as I walked to work today for the closing shift; having a solid gust-proof umbrella is a must for anyone walking among downtown's odd wind patterns.

One thing I haven't mentioned yet is the preponderance of street people here in Victoria. While there were homeless and street walkers in Niagara, one didn't see too much of them all that often, which wasn't to say they were not really there. However, here in Victoria they are quite visible in the downtown core, right in your face quite often. My first time walking through downtown Victoria, I counted more homeless folks in sight that one day than I had ever seen in my life up to that very day. Here, they are polite but ever-present and certainly not shy; they will approach anyone to ask for change, and there is usually someone sitting in front of any store or business that is closed for the day, or in front of the few empty shops that dot the area.

I have mixed feelings on these folks, having worked in cheque cashing for nearly eight years now and seeing the many paths that life can lead a person down. On the one hand, some of these folks were simply dealt bad hands and became stuck here in Victoria, where their life went askew and they haven't been able to turn it back around again. That, I can understand very well. On the other hand, I see people every day on the other side of the glass at work that simply don't care to try, or are so lost to themselves that they are beyond the help of all but the most dedicated social worker. Having heard stories about folks making more by begging changed that I make working for a living( and questioning those same stories ), I always wonder as I pass these folks what their real story is, and why they sit on the sidewalk day after day, asking strangers for change... and where they go at night. I have seen things in passing down alleyways that I will not repeat here, and I know there is a sordid life that exists in every larger city, everywhere in the world, that most folk do not see nor care to. Due to my job, and my own observant nature, I KNOW it is there, and it tarnishes my image of this lovely city to see each street walker working the crowds in downtown Victoria day after day. For it is where the crowds are that they set up; you will not find them outside the local malls, or on side streets or suburban shopping plazas - downtown is where the easy money is, and why they still persist day after day in asking for change. Which is sad, and ironic, for they themselves will never change until it is forced upon them, likely through circumstance and likely through violence. And while I applaud the efforts of organizations like
Stop Homelessness.Ca, I wonder how many of the people I see every day walking to work actually want to change things for themselves. That, I think, is the sad part, and one I see played out day after day in the lobby of my workplace.

So that's my rant on the homeless and the street folk of Victoria. Like it or not, they're there, and nobody who lives in Victoria can deny that fact, though many choose to ignore it as they walk past them... day after day.

Nov. 16th - T.G.I.F.

I spent the morning putting together the last of my PC, so that I could communicate with the world once more without having to use my parent's laptop. Too bad I have to run a fifty-foot cable all the way down the hall to the main room here to connect to the 'net; I will have to figure out a wireless option one day soon when I have more time, as I had to work later this day.

My closing shift last night went well enough, or so I thought. Apparently I missed a few things, as I am wont to do when faced with a new way of doing things in the same company. At least they were minor, and I am dilligently taking notes as I go along, so tonight will go better. As I noted above for yesterday, there are quite a few homeless folk here in Victoria, and the system here to support them is set up somewhat differently from Niagara. Wheras I was used to seeing Social Assistance cheques once a month coming through the doors at work, people here receive a weekly allowance instead, albeit three much smaller cheques and one larger per month. I should also note that due to the wet weather here in Victoria, many of our poorer clients do not have the best odours, and I find that hard to ignore when dealing with them regularly, being a fairly clean person myself. My empathy is working overtime in this new job; seeing so many people so hard-pressed to get through each day tugs at my heart, but at the same time I have to deal with the anger, mental illness and stress that same life brings about in them. Good thing I've trained myself not to get emotional at work, or I'd be a wreck some days.

Nov 17th - A cold, of course...

I woke today with a sore throat, which I blamed on the lousy air in the Landmark; there's no fresh air save if one opens a window( and baseboard heaters only )so I resolved to unpack my air cleaner later tonight after I finished work, hoping it would fix the problem while I slept.

No such luck. By the end of my shift today, I had added a stuffy nose and a headache to my sore throat, all classic signs that I had caught a cold. Lovely. I've very careful at work to wash my hands, use sanitizer regularly and NOT to touch my face, but something got through the window and now I'm going to suffer for it.

I did talk to some of my friends tonight, thanks to my foresight of getting a local number set up in Niagara through Vonage, so that anyone can call me from there as a local call and have it ring out here in Victoria. It was great to talk to all of them while they were at Starbuck's at the Fairview Mall in St. Catharines, as they are wont to do most every Friday. Though I can no longer be there in person, I did stop at a local Steeb's here on the way home tonight, so that I could hoist a hot Tazo Chai tea to them as we talked on the phone. Lovely folks, I miss 'em all.


While it was a great way to end the week, I was feeling rather under the weather... but there you have it Next time, I will try to pack two weeks into one, as doing a week at a time, as a once a week blog entry, will mean I'll always be behind. There's lots more to come!

Sunday 9 December 2007

My First Week in Victoria - What a difference 4000km makes!

My time in Victoria these past 5 weeks has been very busy, but I have tried to be as observant as possible - I want to note all the things, big and small, that I find different about life here in Victoria B.C. . Granted, it's a sizable city, so I'm not exactly living in a small village by the sea.

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I will be updating my previous posts with Web links and pictures in the next week or so, so feel free to check back over them by the end of December to 'see' what you've missed! Again, don't forget you can Comment on on this blog down at the bottom, and the same for any other blog entry. Or, just email me. :)



Nov. 3rd - 10th, 2007 - A Week of First Impressions

I was up & out the door before 10am on
Nov. 3rd, a Saturday - tired or no, we had lots to do and see, and only so much time left before we took the rental car back... but we ended up renting it for the entire week. Our first stop was at Sears, where I picked up a nice belt - on sale, no less! Needed a new one too, the others are a little tatty.

From there, we went to the
Mayfair Mall, one of four area malls( the link also has a lot of info about Victoria's history too ). This one is rather unique; it has a hundred-year-old transplanted "Jeweller's" clock tower on the main corner of Douglas & Hillside, clad in shining golden metal that blazes in the sun like a beacon to shopoholics from across the city. We actually parked on the ROOF of the mall; due to the topography of the area, two of the sides of the mall are actually of a height with the surrounding roads, so the designers built the place with hundreds of additional spots ATOP the mall - you just drive on, and take one of the many stairs or the elevators down. As an aside, you can look DOWN through some of the mall's skylights from the parking lot - rather surreal, in some ways. What I liked the most about the mall( aside from it being modern & clean )is that it had BOTH an Arby's and a ToysRUs - I mean, really, does it get better than that? The food court is spacious and has a wide selection of vendors, and is done with lots of natural fieldstone designed to look like stylish stone fences.

After lunch at the Mayfair, we went to the local
WalMart( there's always one around ), where we stocked up on all the 'essentials'. From there, it was a quick hop to a nearby TD Bank, where the bank manager himself took the time to open up a new account for my parents for their pensions. We stopped across the parking lot at the large Save-On-Foods grocery store, where we picked up more essentials and had to stop my dad from overbuying( as always )on foods. Just next door was the Saanich branch of the Victoria Greater Public Library, where we signed up and took out some reading materials. It wasn't a huge branch( that's downtown )but it was well-appointed, and about half the size of the St. Catharines Central Library - not bad for just a 'satellite' branch. Again, both the staff and patrons were very friendly.

It should be noted that so far, everyone without exception has been friendly and relaxed. A great many people my parents have talked to have enthused over how wonderful Victoria is, and welcomed us effusively to the area with genuine warmth. I must say, it is extremely gratifying to have total strangers smiling and chatting with you within five minutes of meeting you - when this happens again and again, anywhere in the city, you begin to glow and grin as well.

We ended the day on the 3rd rather tired, putting away our shopping swag and relaxing in the evening.

November 4th dawned as a beautiful Sunday morning. We decided to take a drive up the Malahat highway, a winding mountain two-lane road that curves west from Victoria into the gorgeous scenery. The view to the south from Victoria was amazing as well; the peak of Mt. Baker was quite clear, its snow capped top gleaming in the bright sunlight. Too bad I don't have a telephoto camera, or I would surely have snapped some awesome pics. Maybe next year...

The
Malahat drive was stunning; huge trees a hundred feet high at the smallest dominate the slopes of the mountains in this region's wilder sections and in the parks that cover the lands. The drive was a spectacular vista of stunning views and shadowed corridors of trees, recalling many a nature documentary and summoning thoughts of primeval forests that humans stepped lightly through. The brilliant sunshine was a muted green glow filtering through the vast wooden spikes of the trees, whose lower sides were often covered with masses of soft green moss.

Another neat thing going on was the annual Salmon Run. The highway parks were simply bursting with parked cars and crowds of people under the massive trees, all of whom were there to see the local salmon spawning run. Tons of kids running around in the water, which can't have been all that warm. Given that the road curves like a snake on speed, I found it somewhat frightening that so MANY people and cars were packed along the shoulders, with so little room to maneuver for passing vehicles. Still, I put it on my 'to do' list for next year; looks like fun.

We had lunch at the
Malahat Mountain Inn, which is perched on the side of a mountain at the side of the highway and affords spectacular views of the Findlayson Arm of the ocean inlets. The lunch was excellent: I had a spicy broccoli soup that was unlike anything I'd had before, light and tasty yet very filling. Not too expensive for lunch either, considering the view. Too bad the only camera I had was my parent's new cell phone - I took some shots, but they'll be rather pitiful.

On the way home, we drove by
Beacon Hill Park, where another crowd of people were enjoying the fine weather by planting trees. Seems this is another annual thing that goes on around here; a ton of families were out, as were many environmentalists clutching spades. Add the many joggers, cyclists, walkers and other folk, and this place is quite the outdoor mecca.

The evening of the 4
th was another quiet one; I added a quilt AND a blanket to my window with some creative use of nails and clothespins. Tristan seems to be quite happy here now too.

The 5th was a nice Monday, for my first day of work. I walked down the road to arrive for my am shift, which only took a few minutes through the heart of downtown Victoria. The day at the store was quite pleasant, as all the staff there are very friendly. They seemed to let me fit right in, and actually appreciated some of my modest attempts at humour - no serious Sams or prudes there, I am glad to say. Method-wise, the procedures and such are going to take some getting used to in terms of day-to-day operations, as there are many things that differ from what I am used to doing back in Niagara. Still, the basics are the same, and if my co-workers are any indication then there will be little internal staff-stress to deal with - which is good, as the customer stress is more than enough to worry about daily.

The 6th was an uneventful day at my new store, and later on I started to look for apartments here too using the local paper and search websites. While there is a large selection, I found right away that 2-bedroom units are not only scarce, they are expensive. But I will keep looking.

November 7th brought an unexpected surprise after an early 7am work shift: my sister called to say she was ON the island, as she had caught a ride down this way with a friend who runs hos own trucking business. So we piled into the rental and drove back north up-island to the ferry port of Sidney, where we managed to meet her at the local Saveway foods - all this without being able to get her on her cell phone. Unfortunately, we only had about fifteen minutes to see each other before they had to leave again to catch the ferry back to the mainland, but we did a lot of catching up, hugging and generally being a whole family again. It was great.

Nov. 8th was a typical Victoria winter day: grey and drizzly. Unlike Vancouver, our area does not receive heavy rains for weeks at a time; more like morning and afternoon showers that fall gently, unlike the usual driving rains I've grown up with. I worked this afternoon, while my parents spent the day driving to Langford to check out the various 'big box' stores up in that area, as well as scouting some furniture stores along the way.

Friday the 9th opened with us having breakfast at a lovely place called Brannigan's, which though excellent did not have the cozy atmosphere of the Sunrise back in St. Catharines... and of course, only my family was there, and not the usual crowd of friends. Still, it was good. Since it was a day off work for me, we then went on to London Drugs, which is a large chain of stores out here in the West that carries a large variety of goods, like a mini-WalMart in many ways. But less evil... anyway, I purchased an amazing little camera from Fuji, an F50 with a 12-megapixel resolution and a ton of great features all packed into a pocket-sized metal body. Now I could really start taking some decent photos of my new home. After that, we stopped by a place called Dodd's Furniture across from the Mayfair Mall, where we saw some great pieces including some new mattresses that I think both my parents and I will end up purchasing. Not cheap though, but at least I managed to secure some backup funding only a week before our move, enough to meet our many needs until my parents are settled into their pensions come the new year. Kudos to me, and my good luck! We ended the day by stopping in at the license bureau and getting new ones for all three of us, which was remarkably stress-free.

November 10th was another day off, and the weekend to boot. So of course, we went shopping... again. Good thing I love my parents, as I am no fan of shopping for anything save tech. We ended up putting down payments on a pair of mattresses at Dodd's Furniture, as well as a bed set for my parents that my mother simply fell in love with at first sight - my wallet gave a lurch at the same instant. To make up for it, they treated me to lunch at a nice restaurant out on the east end of the island in Oak Bay, called the Blethering Place Tea Room. It is an authentic British Tea Room and pub, with great service and even better food. The decor left something to be desired though; I'm sure any HGTV design team would get hives at the sight of the interior. Still, I had a fantastic turkey club, and being able to sit next to the windows allowed us to enjoy the sight of downtown Oak Bay in the sunshine - it's a very pretty town, similar to NOTL.

I also purchased a GPS( on sale, of course )for my father to use once he begins his tour guide job(s) in the new year. Though he was reluctant to leave the car to see it, he only needed 30 seconds of my demonstrating the easy-to-use
Garmin Nuvi250 unit before asking "How much is it again?" with a smile. I was happy too; having a GPS will allow us to navigate the city much more easily in terms of FINDING places, instead of just wandering and making notes on a paper map. The day ended with my channel-surfing the cable TV here, trying to find my fave shows...


So that's a summary of my first ten days in Victoria. As you can see, I was quite quite busy and had already started work - so much for my week's vacation at the end of October / early November( as usual I spent it in service of the family - maybe next year will be different ). All this, and our huge shipment of worldly goods STILL hadn't arrived from MultiCites - I was starting to worry, and resolved to call them up on Monday the 12th to get an update.

Seeing as THIS blog entry has run on rather long, I will put some of my 'observations' into my NEXT entry, I promise - by this point, I can imagine some folk's eyeball's have started to melt, and a very big THANKS to those of you who have read this far. As a treat, here's a link to one of the things I love the most about Victoria... more about that later. Love this place! Cheers!


Saturday 1 December 2007

Nov. 2nd - My first day in Victoria

Well, it's been a month since I've arrived in Victoria, so let's go back to that first day in my new home city. First impressions, you know... I will be slowly catching up to current events over the next month of blogs( or thereabouts ), as there's a lot to tell and I'd like it to be presented in chronological order, hence:


November 2nd, 2007.

I slept in until 9am, and it felt great - sort of. By sleeping in, I mean I spent the last 2 hours in my new room( it's cozy )trying NOT to hear the buses rumbling by the window every 5 minutes. Joy of joys: the building is on a corner bisecting THREE major roads, along which no less than fifteen different bus routes run. So it's a constant rumble all day, but more noticeable early in the day when you're trying to sleep. So, more incentive to find a new, quieter place, fast.

After breakfast and a leisurely shower( it's a nice bathroom, large tub with glass doors: roomy! )and some more unpacking / reorganizing, I called Telus to reactivate our three phones and get them working in Victoria... or at least I tried. After an hour on the phone with the reps AND Telus Tech Support, I ended up with three new phone numbers and three useless handsets. Seems Telus just upgraded their network here in Victoria as a prelude to the rest of Canada... which meant our four-year-old handsets weren't supported any more. Damn. So much for a two-week battery life on my
Sanyo 4500's( I have six total, 3 spares allowing lots of battery exchanging, extra chargers and accessories ).

After all that, it was close to lunchtime, so I went with my parents over to the nearby
Bay Center( formerly the Victoria Eaton Center - shades of T.O. anyone? ). We ate at the large restaurant on the fifth floor, with a spectacular view of the harbour to the west. Too bad all the window seats were taken, but we can always come back. The food was good too; I had a turkey dinner special that was top-notch for cafeteria-level kitchen work. The place was crowded, so obviously the food was worth coming back for.

Once that was done, I went for a one o'clock meeting at my new work location just down the road. I met the branch manager and the staff, who were all very friendly right off the bat. I familiarized myself with the branch, which is huge and different in some ways operationally from where I was back in St. Catharines, not the least of which is that the District Manager has her full-time office right there in the branch. So I will be under observation, so to speak, but that's not an issue in my mind. From my first impressions everyone there has a good time at work, so in that it's quite similar to the branch I left back in St. Catharines, where everyone had fun working with everyone else. Nice!

I timed my walk back home, walking slowly, and it only took me a shade over fifteen minutes, which is half the distance that I formerly had to walk( at a brisk pace too ). That's great, and since Victoria's downtown slopes towards the south, it's good exercise too, which I need more of. Overall, it's about six or seven blocks distance. Hopefully I can keep the distance similar at whatever place I find to live more permanently in, as I'd rather not have to make a bus trip twice daily. Though I have to say, from the noise coming in the window this morning, the buses here run both frequently and on time, so missing one bus only means having to take a different route-number a minute or two later; one advantage to living near the downtown core.

About the buses, since we're on the topic: they are large, modern, and as already mentioned, run quite frequently. Though the system of stops are still beyond my grasp right now, I have noticed that there are fewer stops in the core than I might have suspected. Still, it's not a far walk to anywhere in the downtown core, and it seems that the bus system extends WAY beyond the furthest reaches that I am used to in a city; the equivalent in ridership coverage back in Niagara would be to have ONE bus system lining ALL the cities in the Niagara region, for ONE fare, running every fifteen minutes. Amazing! But back to the buses: there are bike racks on the front of most, except the double-decker buses that run the longer north-south routes. All the seats are padded, the engines don't wake the dead( like some newer bus models do )and the riders are all relaxed, quiet and friendly; this even extends to the usually-smiling driver. Wow!

Walking back home, I then drove in our current rental car( a blue
Pontiac G6; swish! )to the first Telus store we saw with a parking lot: SoundAdvice over on Quadra St. There, with the help of two cute salesgirls, I picked out a new phone for my parents to use, a Samsung U540 with a large, easy-to-read screen( heh, retirees... )and a low, low cost: $29.99 for the phone for a three-year contract, pretty good overall. I also checked out the other phones available at the time, and fell in love with the soon-to-be-released LG Shine model, in a gold stainless steel finish. I told myself I'd snap it up as soon as it was available, but had to be patient for now.

Off to Sears at the Hillside Mall( one of four major area malls - see this
HUGE directory for all you shopaholics... )and Thrifty's, for a parental pull-along cart and groceries to put in it respectively. This gave us a good look at the city in the daylight, unlike last night in the dark on arrival. The streets are clean, the houses well-kept, and the general malaise of strip-mall corner-plaza mania that seems to have gripped Ontario is absent here. Everything is an eclectic mix of new and old, modern and historic, existing easily side-by-side. Here is a fascinating info site on how Victoria's architecture came into being. Old homes set back amid lush gardens are but blocks away from modern shopping, restaurants and civic buildings. Everything has a well-maintained feel to it, without any sort of hodge-podge clutter effect. It's quite gorgeous too, as the city's climate feeds a lot of rain to the shrubbery, which grew rampant in every yard we passed. There are even year-round garden tours! The lay of the land is hilly, with gentle valleys and the occasional hilltop treating the eye to spectacular views of the far-off mountain ranges in the distance. One nice area is Esquimalt, that overlooks the south harbour. The waterfront area is particularly nice, with large open spaces surrounding the B.C. Legislature buildings and the very impressive Empress Hotel, both of which dominate the area.

Back home once more, we relaxed with a nice dinner made from out grocery foray. The kitchen provides a nice ground-level view of the immediate neighbourhood, looking towards Beacon Hill Park across a nearby intersection. I would have already started taking pictures, but our Minolta G530 camera( my review is
here! )started going bad a few weeks ago, and we haven't replaced it yet. So a few cell-phone snaps will have to suffice until I can do enough research to make a qualified camera choice locally. Which is a necessity, given the amazing scenery of the place, and the fact that it's about time for a new camera anyway given the relentless march of technology. Joy.

Early to bed tonight, even though it's a friday; I have to adjust to the time difference of three hours, and tomorrow our clocks go back an hour for the new Daylight Savings, so that will help at least. The room is cozy but comfy, and will be even cozier once our shipment arrives and I can cram my 'essential stuff' into it. Dreaming of tomorrows, I zonked out before 10pm, very tired.


PS - anyone can 'comment' on this blog, just use the links below. Tell me if you'd like to hear specifics on anything, requests for pictures, etc... feedback is welcome, by email as well !

Thursday 22 November 2007

Moving Day - Nov. 1st 2007

Well, here it is, the day I leave Niagara. Who knew it would arrive so quickly?


November 1st, 2007

Up early( of course )to go get the rental car and finish running around on various errands.

We had packed up our cat Tristan in his carrier and had him in the car with me, which turned out not to be a good idea. The vet had recommended that we use a herbal mixture to keep him calm instead of a sedative, so we'd been dosing him for about a week now in small amounts. Today was the larger dose, given him early so that he'd doze through the trip to B.C.

No such luck though. Somehow, he knew something was up, and started to really panic - so much so that he lost control of his bodily functions... in the carrier, which was in the rental car. Messy. At least we had fasted him the last 12 hours, so it was mostly solids... *sigh*

So, at 11:30am, we had to go BACK to the condo and clean Tristan up, as well as the carrier and the rental car. Thankfully, all three responded well to the cleaning supplies we had left for the new occupants of the place, and my parents were fairly efficient at this sort of thing from years of experience with both pets and small children years ago.

Once Tristan was tidy, we put him on a leash and sat him in my mother's arms so he could look out the window( and remain calmer )while we rushed to the vets: time for a sedative, with no choice in the matter. Once that was done, Tristan calmed down immediately with no harmful effects; he dozed in the carrier placidly for the rest of the trip, eliciting many a comment from people about that 'adorable cat' sleeping in the carrier.

We hit the road running at 12pm, taking the Q.E.W. straight to the Hamilton office of Enterprise Rental cars and transferring our luggage to a local taxi-van called for when we arrived. By renting the car just to take to Hamilton, and taking a taxi from there to the Hamilton International Airport, we saved almost $200.00 as compared to the other alternative, an 'exclusive' limo ride from Niagara Airbus; apparently they don't offer shuttle service to H.I., just Toronto or Buffalo. Jerks... but I still managed to save a TON of money despite them. Which is good, considering that for what this move cost, I could have bought a good used car twice over...

With check-in at H.I. done, we had a little time to relax, so we had lunch in the form of sandwiches from the newly-opened Tim Horton's in the main lobby / waiting area. Tristan was still dozing contentedly in his carrier; we kept checking him the whole trip to ensure he was okay. Oh, and it was also nice to find out that our massively-packed bags were under-weight, so no extra fees for additional pounds of passenger allowance for the flight - a nice bonus.

We boarded the flight on time, in blustery conditions that we were glad to leave behind. Taking off a little after 4pm EST, we soared above the cloud ceiling, revealing a majestic vista I still recall: a vast rolling plateau of white clouds, stretching from horizon to horizon, looking for all the world as though we were flying above a gigantic glacier of white ice. It was stunning, with the bright sun striking shadows among the clefts of the clouds; not a break to see anywhere in the expanse.

We all watched the new movie 'Ratatouille' and enjoyed it immensely, as it was far less sappy-feel-good than I had expected. The animation was excellent, as was the comic timing.

Coming in to land at the Calgary Airport, the view was again incredible. The vast sprawl of the city suburbs were dotted with thousands of tiny dark pine trees, giving the whole vista an odd look resembling someone who hadn't shaved in a few days, all stubbly in the evening light. But the real winner was the view of the mountains to the west: they floated in the distance, a line of ethereal monsters in the twilight, their feet in shadow and their tops lit like white ghosts by the setting sun behind them. Truly amazing, and impossible to get a picture of from an airplane.

After a brief layover in Calgary, barely enough time to grab a Subway 6" sub, we were off again. Fortunately, this was only a little over an hour's flight time, which was good... as we were blessed with a screaming child three rows up, the whole way. Did I mention he kept repeating the same phrase, in another language, over and over? Lovely... an hour's worth of that, and still the tyke didn't manage to tire himself out. At least this wasn't an international haul...

Did I mention that our pilot's name was Walker? MadMax3 fans, you'll get the reference... :)

Landing in Victoria was a relief, to get away from that noise. Too bad the view from the windows was simply of lights in the darkness; I would have liked to see my new home from the air, but perhaps another time I will get the chance. We picked up the rental car and were off from the airport in a flash, though some interesting signage caused us to loop back once before we got the hang of directions.

We traveled south along the main route, the PatBay Highway, which is a lovely 4-lane divided highway that heads straight into Victoria itself. It dips and curves through the landscape, which from what I could see in the dark was still quite rocky and heavily forested. There was not a lot of heavy development, just the usual highway offshoots, though again one difference was that the highway had quite a few stoplights on it, with warning flashers about 100 meters ahead to warn traffic to slow down. The speed limit was 90kph, posted, and surprisingly most traffic kept to that, or under - shocking to my Ontario driving senses. Well-behaved drivers on highways would be something the rest of the country could learn to imitate, in my opinion.

We arrived here just after 7pm PDT. The building was easy to find, though the entrance to the parking garage was a little cramped, as was the parking space( such are the way of things ). It is located near Beacon Hill Park, quite a sizable place in the heart of downtown Victoria. Getting into the condo itself was easy, as it is on the next floor up and there is an elevator too. Looking at the place, it will be nice enough to stay in for the next few months: it has a large kitchen, laundry, two bathrooms( both with shower tubs )and two large bedrooms.

Of course, we had to unpack after such an exhausting trip... family tradition. We all went to bed well after midnight, including Tristan, who lounged out of his carrier and settled in without a fuss in the new place, which we were glad to see. The less fuss, the better; he was still drowsy but was quite happy, as he kept asking for attention as we unpacked, again a good sign of no-stress.

I was very tired, but happy to have finally arrived. Hopefully the rest of our gear would be here within a week, so we could gather some of the essentials from it and begin our search for separate accommodations in Victoria; both my parents and I would each need a 2-bedroom place with laundry, hopefully within walking / fast bus-ride distance of the downtown area.

Now, to sleep in my new hometown, and to dream of the future.


Thursday 15 November 2007

More about the move....

Well, this day started on a bad note early... and just kept on going!


October 31st, 2007

I awoke to the phone ringing - not a good sign. Guess who it was? The shipping company... calling to tell me that they could not ship my 7 pallets of worldly goods, due to the fact that their insurance would only cover commercial shipments, not residential items. Oh, and could I come and pick it all up from Concord ON?

Needless to say, I was livid, shocked, and many other things, but I had no time to vent - I had to find someone to get my goods sent on to Victoria BC ASAP, or I'd likely have to STAY in ON to sort the mess out somehow... missing my plane and adding untold more expense to my moving debts.

Phone call after phone call went without result, as most companies I called refused to touch any shipment they had not packed and picked up themselves. I was starting to lose hope, with visions of paying for months of storage here in ON while I searched for a solution from 4000km away in BC. All this without a lot of sleep, breakfast, or large reserves of patience... of course.

Finally, the 12th company I called said they would be able to pick up the pallets and ship them to BC, from the word go. This was Multicites, who were very nice on the phone and made my day. Sadly, the cost was over double what I had budgeted with Simon's shipping help, but I had no other choice if I wanted to get my possessions sent out in a decent timeframe - the few other companies that had said they MIGHT be able to help would not be able to do so for several weeks. So I sucked it up, kissed financial solvency goodbye and gave Multicities the go-ahead.

Did I mention I was also supposed to be selling my car today? My old '94, Pontiac GrandAM SE that had soldiered on for so many years and had so many parts replaced... for so much money. *sigh* I hit the road as soon as I was done with Multicites, still with no breakfast... and with my dad in tow, as he was possibly working later in the morning as a tour guide in the Falls. We went to Enterprise Rentals on Ontario St., where I picked up a rental Ford and convoyed with my dad on the QEW to the Falls as expeditiously as safely possible.

We arrived in the Falls before 9:30am, picking up Bonnie and heading over to the MTO on Thorold Stone Rd where we did some complex legal gymnastics to transfer the ownership of my GrandAm to Bonnie. Hopefully, she will be able to tweak it's various small quirks and end up with a drivable car - the major repair would be discovering what was causing it to fail the eTest, but fortunately she has some pretty powerful mechanical folk on call. I left the car sitting forlornly behind her apartment, the plates off, its years of service to our family finally done. It was still in remarkably good shape for its age, compared to other cars I have owned.

The rest of the day went by in a blur. I had lunch at the Irish Harp in NOTL, where all the staff were dressed up for Halloween. Our server was a Supergirl variation, with cans on Guinness in a line on her belt - GuinnessGirl, if you like. She was quite the sight in her costume!

Finally, it was time for me to head to the Kilt for the last time. I donned my costume, save for the mask & hands. This year, I was reprising an older costume I'd had in storage for some time - a shaggy hairy monster mask with a nasty fanged mouth and huge blood-red eyes, along with a set of matching hairy hands I'd managed to find at a later date. Wearing a towel across my shoulders under a brown monk's robe, made up to look like a hunchback, I was a fearsome sight that dark evening!

Walking into the Kilt was fun - I managed a limping, rolling gait that had a few folk skirting wide of me on my way from the car, though the effect was slightly spoiled by the fact I was carrying a jacket in a bag. When I arrived, my friends were already there: Mike, with his girlfriend the ever-excellent Junko, Brian, Dan, Rene & Shiloh the Supertastic. All good friends!

It was a fantastic evening, more than I could had asked for as a send-off( of which I've had more than my fair share lately, so 'nuff on that ). Dan drew a sketch of me in costume with his usual genius( it will be posted to FB at a later date ), and many a fantastic picture was taken - again, see FB for details. What a wonderful night, especially given the way I rolled out of bed that morning.

I arrived home after midnight, just as the rain came down to gently wash the world as October ended. I slept on the floor, as my bed had been sold & moved that day while I was out attending to last minute details. The condo was filled with empty shelves, a few forlorn boxes, and bare walls. It spoke of possibilities, of endings and new beginnings, as I let sleep finally claim me.


Friday 9 November 2007

Arriving in Victoria

From the addled mind of Peter :


Here I am folks, 4000km away from where I started( literally )in a new city and province.

This blog will collect my thoughts on my move, what it means to me and where it takes me. I will add in my impressions of Victoria BC as well; the city, the people, the culture and all the little things that make life 'different' out here as compared to the big ON.

For now, a brief Tale of the Trip Out West, for those who would like to know the details!


Oct 29th, 2007 - St. Catharines

I was up early to finish packing. With something like 400 boxes, everything had slowly been boxed over the past month - the entire condo looked like a UPS shipping room, with some tasteful furniture amongst the piles of cardboard. Lots and lots of boxes and tape... at least I took a vacation from work this week, so I was being paid for all this work - a nice touch.

The movers showed up promptly at 8am( Stacey's in St. Kitt's - the best and only ones to use ! ) and started moving boxes down to the loading dock immediately. The final dozen or so boxes were taped up as that process continued( rather speedily too ! ), with a few final boxes left for 'last minute' items to be mailed out to use separately - like a backup hard drive of mine. :-)

The condo looked quite spacious once all the box piles were gone - the place actually looked great in the sunlight, with only the furniture left, all of which we were leaving behind for the building super's( they bought our bedroom suite, the dining room suite and many other items for a fair price, but it was still hard to see it go after all these years ). It was no longer our 'home'.

Off to Simon's workplace with the movers before 10am. The boxes were arranged skillfully on seven pallets, then shrinkwrapped for stability and protection, all within an hour's time. Thanks to Simon's kindness, they would be shipped rather inexpensively through his company's channels... or so I thought. More on that in a future blog, for those who don't already know.

The moving was done by noon, so I had the rest of the day to myself... I spent a good portion of it fiddling with four older PC's of mine, to try and get them to run using a free Linux OS called Ubuntu - with mixed results.

Later that evening I headed over to Pierre & Faith's place to relax. Rene, Shiloh, Brian and Mike were there too. Wine was poured, delicious snacks and desserts were consumed and puns were tossed with abandon all about the room. Shiloh announced that she had named the stuffed toy I had given her for her recent birthday as one 'The UnBearable Mister Ehm' in a tip of the hat to my online name at Cyberwalker.com as well as reference to my fave form of verbal discourse. :)

I also spent a good deal of the evening using Pierre's laptop to instantly call up videos from YouTube as the conversation jumped from subject to subject - I have to say I had a pretty good reaction time, on the order of under 10 seconds from hearing a topic to playing the video. Not bad considering how long a day it had been - loved the Yip Yip aliens, whooo-hoo!

More to come - once I recall what I did that week, I will post it in my next blog, and condense a bit so as not to bore some of the easily distracted out there... :-)

From BC, signing off...

Peter