Today in (My) History

This is traditionally the time of year when I have a sudden urge to ditch PEI and run away to Lamu. Too much cold, wind, rain, and no sign of improvement for seven months.

Let’s look back.

In 2003, I bought a new pair of pants and Daniel started a weblog.

In 2002, I was railing on about the Capital Commission again.

In 2001, I was recalling Robertson Davies and obsessing about television.

In 2000, it was all about I’ll Be Seeing You. That is my favourite of the pieces I’ve produced for radio.

And in 1999 it was poems about snowflakes.

Before then, darkness.

Pus Drainage (no, wait, it gets better…)

Here’s an excerpt from yesterday’s entry in the weblog of The Global Trip, written by a blogger named Erik who’s on day number 391 of a trip around the world:

DAY 391: Because of the hole in my leg from the pus drainage operation of the abscess I developed in Nepal, I wasn’t exactly the most beach-worthy traveler in India. While salt water might have aided in the healing…

Erik is a good writer, and his blog is a comprehensive tale of his travels, with a good mixture of travelogue, personal reflection, and wacky tales of adventure.

You can follow Erik’s trip — along with the round-the-worlding of a group others — on the Blog Around The World website.

Enterprise?

Can someone tell me, in plain language, what “enterprise” means when used marketing technology products with phrases like “enterprise class?” Does it just mean “for business” or “for a whole bunch of people,” or is there some more subtle meaning?

Satiate Your Travel Bug

If you’ve got the travel bug, it seems like this season is a spectacularly good time to take the plunge. In a half hour of light searching, I’ve found fares like Air Canada Halifax to London return for $458 CDN (leaving Nov. 22, returning Dec. 1) and United Washington, D.C. to Osaka, Japan return for $466 US (leaving Nov. 22, returning Dec. 2). Remember, from Charlottetown you can fly to Boston, New York, Montreal or Washington with only 15,000 Aeroplan miles, and from there you can jump off to pretty well anywhere.

Fall Food in Charlottetown

For my money, the best standard regular everyday meal in Charlottetown — call it “comfort food” if you like — is the Boca Burger with vegetarian rice at Cedar’s. Cedar’s manages to achieve what few other restaurants do: they make good vegetable sides. The “vegetarian rice” is, in fact, plain rice with a vegetable side, the vegetables being a tasty melange of brocolli, carrots, and turnip. And they’re not mushy overboiled vegetables: they’re perfectly cooked, and hot. Excellent.

If you’re looking for soup to take the edge off a cold day, though, you cannot go wrong with the homemade chicken and rice soup at the Town and Country. Made famous by Campbell Webster, this soup is amazing, and will knock the wind back into your sails.

Up the road, at the corner of Queen and Chestnut, is the new Cool Dog Deli (thanks to A. for the pointer). This is a Cindy Burton project, and is, as the cashier told me when I asked, “just a simple little grocery store.” They sell fresh vegetables (organic garlic included), Karin La Ronde meals and sides, fresh bread, and various sundries. They also appear to sell some sort of homebrew dog biscuit. It’s brightly painted inside, and looks to be likely to develop into a solid almost-downtown food destination. They need to fill up the shelves a little more, get a better beverage selection, and finish off the decorating, but I’m hopeful.

There are a couple of new places to eat in town that I haven’t explored yet. Apparently there’s some sort of new waffle/pancake place at 92 Trans-Canada Highway, which I think is the plaze where Tweel’s decamped to out by Robin’s Donuts. And the space formerly occupied by the Anne of Green Gables Tea Room, and then by Manhattan’s, on Queen St. near Richmond, looks to be occupied by a new place. Details on either from readers with experience are welcome.

One more, so far uncorroborated, food note from a correspondent: “The Root Cellar has completely given up and will no longer sell food. They are just going to sell pills. I’ll miss the spices and the cheese.” Can anyone confirm that?

Pages