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August 19, 2007

Well, that was amazing

The lantern festival, I mean. It was great. We took the GO train to Exhibition at about 6:30, and walked down through the Ex, which had just started yesterday. It was just Amelia and me; the others were coming later. Luckily we had borrowed an old umbrella stroller from Jackie, as the walk was quite long and Amelia is tired at that time of night.

The 'lanterns' weren't really lanterns - they were almost life-size reproductions of scenes from Chinese history and culture, made of transparent fabric and lit from within when it got dark. Some of them moved and had fountains, etc. It was very impressive. They also had a show that included a lion dance, maritial arts and acrobatics. Unforuntately the 'lions' came down among the spectators and scared Amelia out of her wits and she started screaming.

Thursday we drove down to Queen St. West and Chinatown. The cluster of shiny condo buildings continues to grow along the lake, which I find quite sad. They cut the lake off from the city like a big glass wall. But Queen St. is much the same. I love it there - it's like my spiritual home. The fact that it's mostly quirky clothes shops probably says something about me. But I feel quite at home there. And it's one of the few places you can go to at 10:30 am and it feels early morning - everything is just waking up. Plus it's still quite gritty in parts - there's a Money Mart, a rundown neighbourhood laundry, and the former mental hospital that I think is still used as a day centre by people with mental illnesses. I like a bit of grit.

We walked down to Spadina/Chinatown, had a look around, and then took the streetcar back to where we'd parked. A strange thing happened. We got on and I told the driver we needed to go a few blocks west of Bathurst. He said, 'OK'. I said, 'So, how much is that?' He said, 'Oh, don't worry about it - it's only a few stops. Next time.' I was gobsmacked, as they say. That's never happened before. I'm used to cranky transit drivers.

August 15, 2007

Coming soon

Now in MIssissauga, after a great three weeks in the Maritimes. Spent the last five days with Kenda and kids in NS. Would say with Mike also, but he came down with strep throat (poor guy!) and had to lock himself in the bedroom. Kenda and I and the kids went to a cottage kindly loaned to her by a friend - it was a lovely cottage on a beautiful lake but unfotunately the only full day Amelia and I had there, it poured with rain (and only the second rainy day of our trip). Typilcal. It was still fun though.

More soon.

August 08, 2007

More photos

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The obligatory 'at the Fredericton saturday market' shot.

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Mark's new car.

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At the graveyard in Alma, NB, where some of our Shields ancestors are buried.

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Fundy National Park, NB.

August 04, 2007

Here

Here we are, in Canada once again. Been here more than a week actually. We met Mum, Dad, Mark and Sachiko at the airport in Halifax. Met up with my first cousin and her husband and kids for dinner, then the next day left to drive to NB. Suffered from jet lag a bit the first few days. Was very hot - about 34C, which is hotter than it usually gets in NB - and humid. That Saturday was the big surprise 70th birthday/45th anniversary party for Mum and Dad at Suzie and Jamie's house - and we managed to keep it a secret until the walked into her back garden and saw all their friends and relatives. They thought they were going to a small family barbeque. It was a great success, even though poor Rob and Jamie had great trouble putting up the marquee tent thing we hired.

Since then it seems like we've been on the go all the time, though we probably haven't. Meelie has got in the habit of staying up late and sleeping late, and has had a couple of disturbed nights, which has left me pretty tired.

Fredericton is a strange place. (It's where I grew up from the age of nine to twenty, for those of you wh don't know.) Population about 40-50,000, which hasn't changed in 35 years. I think of it as a quiet, safe place, but then Dad warned Mark to move his car off the street because of joy riders, and they were talking about people being 'swarmed' by groups of young men on the walking paths at night.

Then on Saturday, when we went to the market, I saw a downtrodden looking women sitting on a folding chair near the street, holding a paper cup, with a stuffed toy dog on the ground beside her. I had to ask what she was doing, which was, as Dad explained, begging. It's been so long since I've seen it I didn't even recognize what it was! In Exeter the homeless people sell the Outreach newspaper, but I haven't seen anyone begging. I didn't really expect it in Fredericton.

A couple of photos for you:

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Yes, I know - she's in a buggy. It was a special treat because it was hot, she was tired, and it was the only way we could get her to go to the Scottish Festival, which was an essential part (although they didn't know it) of keeping Mum and Dad away from Suzie's before the party...