Catherine and Oliver went to Old Home Week yesterday, and one of the things they took in was a cooking demonstration led by former Compass anchor Roger Younker — a sort of “Soup to Nuts” in aid of PEI-produced products.
Midway through the session I happened to call Catherine on her mobile, and midway through our call I heard a commotion and Catherine disappeared for a minute. Turns out that Oliver felt it important that Roger know that I was on the phone, so he walked up onto the stage to tell him. Roger, as you might expect, was confused.
Catherine, ever quick on her feet, quickly repositioned the purpose of Oliver’s romp by suggesting to Oliver that he ask Roger “what kind of cheese are you using.” Which, apparently, smoothed things out.
I thought I might take my bike out to the Charlottetown Mall to catch a movie, and then ride the bus back. But a call to the transit operator reveals that they don’t permit bicycles on the buses, nor do they have any provision for transporting them otherwise. Which would seem to be a big hole in building a convenient intermodal transportation in the capital area.
My friend Oliver reports that bikes ride free on California buses.
Looks like Timothy’s, where you’ll find me for morning coffee and bagel many mornings, is moving around the corner to the space occupied by Café Soleil back in the 1990s. I just talked to impresario Campbell Webster about the move: their lease was up and they jumped at the chance to move to a bigger space.
Things are moving fast — they have to be out of the old space by August 31st. The new space, Campbell says, is twice as large, and so they should be a lot more room to ramble. Next door there’s a vintage clothing slash music shop moving in, and the two will be connected at the middle to afford cross-pollination opportunities.
The new Showtime program Californication somehow ended up on our “Movie Network on Demand” list last week, even though the series doesn’t premiere until tonight. So we watched. The highlight of the show is Natascha McElhone, I think; Madeleine Martin, who plays her daughter, is also pretty good. In fact even David Duchovny, recently in my “completely unwatchable” books after a long series of bad movies, turns in a decent performance. Dramatically (at least in the first episode) the show isn’t much more than a standard divorced couple struggling to raise their daughter in a crazy world drama, but it’s well written, and well shot.
Ever since the Anne of Green Gables license plate was released in 1993 there were rumours about how it reflected a “half-finished” design.
Now that both my version thereof and the plate’s putative designer Baxter Ramsay have retired, I decided to get to the bottom of the story, and sent off an inquiry to Baxter last week. Here’s his reply:
This is very true. I was asked to come up with some designs for a new plate, Anne, Bridge, Government House, Province House… The most favored pick (at my office) was the Bridge Plate. The next time I saw the Anne Plate it was done on a metal plate and all the mistakes were still there: her hair curls were wrong, door on the house in the wrong place along with the windows trees etc… I just did a fast sketch on ink and from memory (which was not very good) and sent it to motor vehicle. I said if it was to be used it needed to be corrected and made to fill in the plate more… Well what you see is what we got…
So it appears the rumours were right. Apologies to Baxter for blaming him all these years for something that wasn’t his fault ;-)
Canada Post has a Food Mail Program governing the cost of shipping food to Northern Canada:
The Food Mail Program is a service offered by Canada Post and funded by the Federal government. The Food Mail Program is a commitment by the Federal government to subsidize the transportation costs incurred when shipping nutritious food and other essential items to isolated communities within Canada.
The program differentiates between Nutritious Perishable Food, Food of Little Nutritional Value and Convenience Perishable Foods.
Whenever there’s talk of regulating food in the same way that, say, cigarettes are regulated, there’s always a lot of discussion about the impossibility of drawing arbitrary lines. The Food Mail Program draws the lines; indeed the FAQ for the program makes it clear that it has a clear dietary engineering agenda:
Q. Why were some Convenience Perishable Foods eliminated from the Food Mail Program in 1996?
A. The principal objective of the Food Mail Program is to reduce the cost of nutritious perishable food and other essential items, thereby improving nutrition and health in isolated northern communities which do not have year-round surface transportation.
There was no justification for continuing to subsidize high fat convenience foods which contribute to disease rather than promote health. The increasing intake of fat from southern meats and “junk food” is becoming a serious health and nutrition concern in the North. A high intake of fat, particularly saturated fat, has been linked with an increased risk of heart disease, gallbladder disease, and cancer of the colon, breast and prostate.
Convenience prepared foods are also more expensive than similar products prepared at home. By eliminating the subsidy from convenience foods, the cost of basic, healthy foods can be kept as low as possible.
Although it would appear to be something related only to the North, surely the federal and provincial subsidies of air, rail and most-of-all road infrastructure here in the South could be considered as much a subsidy to industrial food producers as anything else. As such, I wonder whether the same logic behind the Food Mail Program could be used to, say, charge a truck filled with Jos. Louis more to cross the Confederation Bridge than a truck filled with carrots.
From the New York Times Magazine: The Road to Clarity, an article on the design and roll-out of Clearview, a new font for highway signage developed in the US (link from my Mom).
Aaron Koleszar — you may remember him from his appearance on the cover of TIME magazine — is launching a new organic vegetable delivery service this week. If you order today, you’ll get delivery on Thursday. Here’s the complete text of his email offer:
I am pleased to announce that I will be making my first deliveries of an organic local veggie box next Thursday, August 16. If you want to order a veggie box and/or anything else (see below), please reply by email or phone by the evening of Monday, August 13. If you are ordering, please provide your location, address, street (or route #), civic #, apartment #, directions (if not obvious), phone #, cell phone #, email address (if I’m not emailing you), drop-off specifics (see below), and what you’d like to order.
This week, the cost for a veggie box will be $22. I expect this week’s box will contain yellow beans, green beans, broccoli, beet greens, lettuce, zucchini, new potatoes, and young onions from Sweet Clover Farm.
Certified Organic Produce Price yellow beans (1lb.) $4 green beans (1lb.) $4 broccoli (head) $2 beet greens (bunch) $3 lettuce (head) $2 zucchini (bag, mixed yellow & green) $3 new potatoes (2 lbs.) $3 young onions (bunch) $3
Limited supply, by order only (chemical-free, ie. not certified organic, from my garden or nearby woods)peppermint (bunch) $2 raspberries (pint) $4 chanterell mushrooms (pint) $4 chanterell mushrooms (quart) $7
Coffee (Certified Organic, Fair Trade, Locally Roasted). Please Indicate Whole Bean or GroundBolivian Medium Roast (1lb.) $11 Bolivian Dark Roast (1lb.) $11 Mexican Medium Roast (1lb.) $11 Mexican Dark Roast (1lb.) $11
Decaffeinated is available, but it’s not Organic or Fair Trade ($11) I can get Just Us Certified Organic Fair Trade Decaf from the Turning Point Natural Food store, but I’m not sure of the price yet.
Organic Products from the Turning Point Natural Food store - I will be selling a wide variety of organic products from the Turning Point Natural Food store in Montague (grains, beans, seeds, nuts, dried fruit, oils, nut butters, canned goods, pasta, flours, sauces, soups, condiments, teas, vitamins, cleaning supplies, and more). I will be developing a product/price list over the next while, but if you want to order something before that, get in touch. I do have a list of many items and prices, but it will take a while to input into the computer, and even then won’t be an exhaustive list.
Drop-off specifics - Where should the box be left if you are not home? front porch? back porch? at neighbor’s? in shed? Please consider inclement weather and local animals.
Payment method - How will you be paying? If you’re not at home? Leave payment? Mail a cheque? If possible, advance payment is appreciated. Post-dated cheques are one option. I am not able to accept credit cards or Interac. Sorry, only cash, cheque, or money order.
Baked Goods - Starting in the fall I expect to carry a variety of organic goods from Junellen Clausheide’s bakery.
Allergies, Preferences, Substitutions - Please feel free to indicate any allergies, preferences, or your feelings about substitutions if you order a specific product that is not available. I hope to incorporate people’s preferences where feasible, especially as the variety of available fresh produce grows (no pun intended).
Prices subject to change - Prices are subject to change, depending on supply, cost, and other factors.
Delivery charge - In some cases, I may need to charge a small fee for delivery to non-central areas. (At this time I am definitely unable to deliver to O’Leary or Summerside.)
Other Products - I will be adding other products over time. Stay tuned…
You can contact Aaron at 902-659-2575, or by email at aaronkol at isn.net.
Yesterday at the beach (yes, we did end up at the beach) I plonked myself down in Catherine’s high-tech folding beach chair and browsed through the copy of Else/Where: Mapping New Cartographies of Networks and Territories that had been sitting on my bookshelf since I bought it last summer. It’s an amazing book, especially if, like me, you’re interested in maps and visualization.
Appropriate given the subject matter, there’s a visualization of the book itself [8.1 MB PDF].
Travel writer and activist Edward Hasbrouck blogs about air travel and global warming; he writes, in part:
I’ve been saying for years that the current phenomen of world travel by air accessible to ordinary people from First World countries is not only recent (dating only to the last half century) but likely to be short-lived. That was already apparent as a consequnce of the dependence of air travel on fossil fuel, and the inherent scarcity of the same. The negative environmental effects of air travel are only likely to accelerate its rapid (in historical terms) demise over the next half century or less.
I find the intersection of travel and the climate crisis fascinating because it pits two branches of the bohemian lifestyle in direct opposition, in a way that is seemingly impossible to reconcile.
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