It’s the people, stupid

I’d settled firmly into a post-exotic travel malaise this week. It happens every time I travel: after the constant stimulation of travel, home life seems, well, mundane. Of course returning to Prince Edward Island in the middle of a late-spring return to brisk rainy conditions makes it all the more challenging. “Why exactly do we live here,” I am forced to ask myself.

Faced with the stark reality that Prince Edward Island is not as [exotic \| stimulating \| old \| mountainous \| warm] as [exotic place] and that it doesn’t have anywhere near as wonderful the [wine \| cheese \| chocolate \| pad thai \| elephants], it’s easy to fall into a funk.

Today I popped out of the funk, as quickly as I fell into it.

Why? It’s the people, stupid. May sound trite and sentimental (or thoughtless), but I’d forgotten how many wonderful people there are here on the Island. And today was jam-packed with deliberate and happenstance encounters with an uncommon number of them, including:

  • My fellow directors on the L.M. Montgomery Land Trust, all of whom care passionately about the Island, and work to preserve it.
  • Brother Johnny.
  • Derek Martin from City Cinema, who single handedly maintains Charlottetown’s primary “big city” cultural lifeline.
  • The enigmatic Eugene Sauve, owner of The Landmark Cafe, world traveler.
  • The folks at the Formosa Tea House and Monsoon, who keep me alive. Literally.
  • My friends and landlords at silverorange. You couldn’t ask for better lords. And today they threw away all of our accumulated garbage in the middle of a spring cleaning frenzy.
  • Woman of many hats — interesting in all of them — Cynthia Dunsford.
  • Diane and Jacques from Gaudreau Fine Woodworking and fibre artist Barbara Henry, all of whom I met during my time with the PEI Crafts Council.

There are many, many more Islanders, ones I didn’t happen to bump into today, who make this a good place to live. We might not have the cheese or the elephants, but we’ve got them. Thanks.

The Aliant Phone Book Cover

Here is the cover of the Aliant local telephone directory for Prince Edward Island released this week:

There are 62 babies pictured on the cover; there’s a note on the back of the book that says “All of the babies proudly shown here are children or grandchildren of Aliant employees or retirees.

Of the 62 babies, there are 3 or 4 that could be seen to be “visible minorities,” which Statistics Canada defines as:

The concept of visible minority applies to persons who are identified according to the Employment Equity Act as being non-Caucasian in race or non-white in colour. Under the Act, Aboriginal persons are not considered to be members of visible minority groups.

Four of 62 babies is 6.45%.

The report Visible minority population, by provinces and territories (2001 Census) from Statistics Canada says that the “Total visible minority population” of Canada is 13.44% and of the four Atlantic provinces it’s 2.16%. Prince Edward Island has the smallest percentage of the four provinces with 0.88% (1,180 people of 133,385 residents).

On the face of it, then, Aliant’s representation of the babies of Atlantic Canada is a roughly accurate portrayal of the colour of the population in general.

I’m interested in what others think about this. I’ve asked Aliant for comment on the actual makeup of their workforce.

Edmonton, Stuttgart, Atlanta, St. John’s

Air Canada is in the middle of another seat sale, although the prices aren’t nearly as attractive as those they offer in the winter and spring. Oddly, the list of on-sale destinations from Halifax is limited to the following:

  • Edmonton International (AB) — YEG
  • St. John s (NF) — YYT
  • Atlanta (GA) — ATL
  • Copenhagen Airport (DK) — CPH
  • Munich (DE) — MUC
  • Stuttgart (DE) — STR

Can anyone tell me what those cities have in common? I certainly don’t know.

We should be thanking Air Canada, though: I’ve often said that the most debilitating challenge of vacation travel planning is choosing where to go. Air Canada has, in limiting the scope of the world, made planning much easier: will it be Stuttgart or St. John’s this year?

In a related development: Catherine and I had a brief discussion last night about whether it would be appropriate to plan a future trip to France entirely around a rather excellent cup of coffee that Catherine had in the walled medieval village of Capendac. Our jury is still out.

Back on Safari

After being a total 100% diehard Firefox user for almost a year, I’ve switched back, at least 1/2 the time, to Apple’s Safari browser after upgrading to OS 10.4 “Tiger.” I can’t explain why this is, as Safari hasn’t changed all that much. But it seems faster and slicker and Firefox is starting to seem bloated. Probably all in my head.

Judcasting: YANKEE Podcasts

Jud’s New England Journal is a longstanding audio feature of YankeeMagazine.com, one of the sites we maintain for our friends at YANKEE Magazine.

Jud’s New England Journal is a monthly audio commentary about life in New England by the always-interesting Jud Hale, Editor in Chief of the magazine. Jud is a lifelong New Englander, and his columns cover everything from New England humour to “fishing for scrod.”

The commentaries pre-date the “podcasting” phenomenon by several years, but seemed well-suited for podcast delivery, so in addition to their home on the web, there’s now a Jud’s New England Journal podcast feed.

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