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Westering (2)

Cal­gary

We arrived in Cal­gary about sup­per­time, and found S & J’s house with­out too much dif­fi­cul­ty. They live in a rel­a­tive­ly new part of town, and there are a lot (a lot) of streets in the area that start with “Val­ley”.

Both of them had tak­en Mon­day off, and so we would have two full days of hangin’ out all togeth­er. And that’s what we did.

S & J have quite the house. It’s a two-sto­ry job, with a mez­za­nine lev­el that has vault­ed ceil­ings and a fire­place. Four bath­rooms in the place, which is one more than the num­ber of bed­rooms. When we were there, they had almost all the rooms re-paint­ed. (I chat­ted with S recent­ly; they’ve now com­plet­ed the painting.)

I’d love to say that we did aston­ish­ing feats of der­ring-do and hab­er­dash­ery while we were out in Cal­gary, but in truth, we had a nice, qui­et time. We hung around the house, played cards, and ate more than we should have. (In some cas­es, much, much more.) We accom­pa­nied S & J on a tour of one of the lit­tle shop­ping dis­tricts, where they bought a cou­ple of vas­es, and then we gorged on choco­late at a lit­tle choco­lati­er. We played cards–did I men­tion the cards? We enter­tained Mon­ty, the cat.

Mon­day we hopped in the car and went to the moun­tains. Hav­ing grown up on the prairie, hav­ing spent most of my life on the flat­lands, I’m always impressed when I see the Rocky Moun­tains up close and per­son­al. There’s some­thing so–sharp–about them. They always give me the impres­sion that you could reach out, chip off a piece of stone, and very care­ful­ly shave with it. But be care­ful not to drop it on your foot, because it’ll slice a toe clean off. You would­n’t even notice till some­one said, “Hey, is that your toe?”

Pho­tos:
Mountain and lake

Yours truly

Mountain, tree, and clouds

End of the road

Mountain

Susie and Jeff

Monty and Pat

And then on Tues­day, while our hosts were at work, we packed up our rental car, bade the house adieu, and head­ed north, back up to Edmonton.

I did­n’t get any pho­tos of it, but on the way back up, some­where just before Red Deer (IIRC), there was a semi truck on fire. Seri­ous­ly. Ful­ly engulfed in flames. He was on the far side of the south­bound high­way, and I was in the right lane of the north­bound high­way. There was a wide ditch between us. I was prob­a­bly no clos­er than six­ty feet from the truck at any one time.

But I felt the heat from the fire through my closed win­dow. It spooked me somewhat.

When we passed, there were no fire trucks or ambu­lances on the scene as yet. A few peo­ple had stopped and had their cell phones out, though. I kept dri­ving. As we neared Red Deer, there were a cou­ple police cars screamed by, head­ed south.

Thank­ful­ly, my adven­ture was far less inter­est­ing than that truck dri­ver’s was.

The Oscars

So I watched part of the Oscars last night. I also played a video game dur­ing part of them, with the TV on in the back­ground. While I was play­ing my game, I heard some­one say that the Oscars had “gone green” this year. And I thought, Does that mean every­body walked to the the­atre? Or rode bicy­cles? Or even used pub­lic transportation?

Then I thought, Who am I kidding?

Another Brick in the Wall (flickrblogging — 3459)


IMG_3459
Dis­cov­ered in six times mighty’s Flickr photostream. 

Dude… You’re play­ing ‘In The Flesh’… from ‘The Wall’… in front of… a wall…”

Richie, please, man, you’re embar­rass­ing me. You need to find a room and sleep it off. And maybe next time only have one of your brown­ies before the show.”

…cos­mic, man…”

Richie, I don’t even know any Pink Floyd songs. I’ve been play­ing Mozart all damn night.”

…cos­mic.”

* * *

Ran­dom Flick­r­blog­ging Explained
Tech­no­rati: flick­r­blog­ging

I’m there right now”

Warn­ing: Freaky spooky con­tent ahead. Don’t click unless you like the hee­bie-jee­bies (or the jib­blies, if you’re a Strong Bad fan).

Today, on YouTube, I dis­cov­ered two of the eeri­est moments com­mit­ted to cel­lu­loid, and they’re both from David Lynch films.

Chrono­log­i­cal­ly first, here’s a snip from Lost High­way:

I have the sound­track to this film. The song that brack­ets the clip is titled “Some­thing Wicked This Way Comes”, IIRC.

Aaaaaaaaaaand after that bit of spook­i­ness, this one should seem down­right nor­mal. From Mul­hol­land Dr.:

The singer is named Rebekah Del Rio, and there’s quite the sto­ry behind that song and its appear­ance in Mul­hol­land Dr.

These two clips have some­thing in com­mon: When I saw the respec­tive films that they come from, each one was the one piece that stuck with me the most. Both had that spooky qual­i­ty that just embed­ded them in my mind.

13 snippets

Since I should be writ­ing tonight (I got 6,000 words while we were in Edmon­ton, and not a let­ter since), I’m going to dip into my works-in-progress file for tonight’s 13, and present:

13 snip­pets from works in progress

Hope­ful­ly each and every one of these bite-sized morsels from short fic­tion or nov­els-in-ges­ta­tion will make you slaver to read the com­plete, fin­ished work. Let me know, if you so desire, what works for you, and what doesn’t.

  1. Demoi­selle Noir was younger than Riley had expect­ed. Only the pal­lor of her skin spoke of her present con­di­tion; her hair was the col­or of hon­ey, dressed up in ringlets, and her clear eyes were the grey of a storm at sea. Here in her office she wore a dark blouse of some mate­r­i­al that shone like silk and loose flow­ing trousers in a col­or that remind­ed Riley of the foam that crest­ed white­caps. (from Every­thing that Nev­er Hap­pened)
  2. Tom­my, though, his spe­cial­ty was church songs. There were a few that the rest of us would join in on, like “Amaz­ing Grace”, but for most of them Tom­my was on his own. He did­n’t sing them often–he’d get an embar­rassed look when we’d request them, like we were maybe going to make fun of him–but when he did sing one it was unre­al. His voice was a per­fect instru­ment, not some­thing you’d expect from a gan­g­ly kid who spoke with a lisp, and when he’d belt out the cho­rus with the fire­light flick­er­ing across his face, let­ting his voice rise with the smoke, coil­ing upwards past the whis­per­ing trees to the stars them­selves, I’d feel a shiv­er crawl up and down my spine. (from “Three Months and Two Days”)
  3. I under­stand you’re on the way to kill your broth­er,” said the dog. “Sure you’ve got it in you?” (from “The Flood”)
  4. A girl met Yak­oub at the door, naked as birth. A gryphon ram­pant marched across her chest, tat­tooed in gold and red and black, its tuft­ed lion’s tail held high, one paw reach­ing for her left breast. Her hair was blonde, falling in soft waves to her bare shoul­ders. (from Salyx)
  5. Ghost-cap­tain Muir sum­moned me to his office. The room was a palace of the imag­i­na­tion, floored in pale mar­ble, with ludi­crous columns and spires reach­ing for a ceil­ing lost in mist. Rain­clouds had formed over by the west win­dows, and a slow but steady driz­zle watered his for­est of trop­i­cal bon­sai. (from “Out­side, Look­ing In”)
  6. Toi and Chad­ow slept in the roots, twin­ing their sleep­ing bags into the fine white cap­il­lar­ies that branched off from the main sys­tems. Toi lay on his stom­ach, wak­ing to face the tiny dots of light that were uncount­ably dis­tant, unimag­in­ably vast fam­i­lies of stars. Chad­ow pref­ered to lay on her back, fac­ing the dark under­sides of leaves through which, some­times, she would catch a glimpse of fil­tered sun­light. (from The Tree)
  7. In a bowl carved from the burl of a cher­ry tree sat a sphere the col­or of cognac, a stone from Earth her­self. Grz­gy picked it up, care­ful not to let his claws scratch its sur­face, and rolled it around in his palm. Its cool heft had a calm­ing effect on him. (from Earth Fleet)
  8. Final­ly, in a nar­row shop wedged between a bistro and a book­store, she found a tiny Pekingese hand-carved from a piece of Chi­nese jade. The thing was ancient, and the price made me weak in the knees, but Zdama slapped her cred­it card down on the spot­less glass counter and the clerk care­ful­ly wrapped the tiny dog in stra­ta of white tis­sue paper. (from “Between Heav­en and Earth”)
  9. Imry glanced at the cal­en­dar tacked above the eye; Miss Sep­tem­ber, in the best tra­di­tion of men’s mag­a­zines from a pre­vi­ous mil­len­ni­um, had a look about her that was simul­ta­ne­ous­ly hum­ming­bird-shy and hard-core slut­ty. “D’y­ou sup­pose it’s Sep­tem­ber? Out there?” (from “The Long Fall”)
  10. Overnight some­one had plant­ed a gar­den. It had to have been one of the AIs, or one of the robots, and they prob­a­bly had used time shapers, some­thing Lady Schrone was cer­tain she’d marked down as pro­scribed. But it was hard to be angry, because the gar­den was beau­ti­ful: flow­ers, flow­ers of all descrip­tions, radi­at­ing away from a cen­tral point like the spokes of a great wheel, and at the wheel’s cen­ter a tree reached for the heav­ens. Leaves the size of her body unfurled them­selves at the tree’s top, near­ly twen­ty meters from the ground. They were sharp and green against the blue of the sky. (from “The Parley”)
  11. Some­day, he hoped, he’d find a tow­er tall enough to show him the part of the world with­out snow. He was con­vinced it must exist some­where. Sure­ly the whole Earth could­n’t be cov­ered in twen­ty feet of snow. Could it? (from “Fim­bul­vetr”)
  12. For nine days the sky itself had burned, and even now, five years lat­er, John did­n’t like sun­sets. But Miko did, and he was­n’t stub­born enough to argue his way around her insis­tences, so they sat on the black­ened con­crete stoop and watched the sky light up all over again. (from “After the Mis­sile Rain”)
  13. I know a great many things. My web of thought spans galax­ies.” She was a group mind, he knew, a galaxy-wide enti­ty that shared a com­mon name and a com­mon out­look. Her thought was net­worked in an instan­ta­neous com­mu­ni­ca­tion web; some­how, though the physi­cists and xeno­bi­ol­o­gists had yet to explain it, what one Yasht knew, every Yasht knew. (from “Yasht”)

Tech­no­rati: Thurs­day Thirteen

Post a com­ment and I’ll add you to the list!

Westering (1)

Some­time before Christ­mas, my dar­ling wife went online, to the VIA Rail web­site. She punched in some dates, a start­ing point and a des­ti­na­tion, and said “Show me the mon­key!”* Then she said, “Holy crap, it’s cheap­er to take the train to Edmon­ton than it is to fly! Even on Westjet!”

So she ordered up a cou­ple round-trip tick­ets, and gave them to me for Christmas.

* * *

We got on the train at around 8:15 pm on Fri­day night. This was only about an hour after we were sup­posed to be on the train–apparently Via’s got­ten bet­ter at stick­ing to a sched­ule than they were back in the day when my Dad and my Gram­pa were sup­posed to pick up my aunt and uncle, and end­ed up going back into town** to buy some play­ing cards.

We were to trav­el overnight through Saskatchewan, miss­ing the prairie scenery while we slept, and arrive in Edmon­ton at 8:05 on Sat­ur­day morn­ing. We were trav­el­ing in Com­fort Class, because “Com­fort Class” sounds bet­ter than “Seats like a Bus, but with More Legroom and Lit­tle Footrests Class”. It was­n’t my most com­fort­able night’s sleep, and the less said about the cry­ing baby and the snoring/murmuring woman behind us, the better.

We were late get­ting into the Big E, but not as late as we could’ve been. K’s sis­ter S met us, with her hub­by C and their two-year-old Miss J. We went to the pool to see Miss J’s swim­ming lessons, then out to lunch (drop­ping off S at home, since she had to work). After lunch we head­ed to the satel­lite city of Leduc, where a rental car awaited.

Too bad the rental place had closed at noon.

And would­n’t be open on Sun­day, either.

This was the cause of some con­ster­na­tion, and no small amount of swear­ing. I called the 888 num­ber for the rental com­pa­ny’s head office, and was told that there were no rental out­lets open near me. I was polite to the operator–it was­n’t her fault–but I kind of hope that they were record­ing the call for train­ing pur­pos­es, so that my com­ment “I find it dif­fi­cult to believe that a rental com­pa­ny would have no offices open past noon on a Sat­ur­day.” The best part is that this par­tic­u­lar office is con­sid­ered the “air­port loca­tion”, since they’ll come pick you up at the air­port. What hap­pens if my flight comes in at 1:00 PM?

So C drove us back to the air­port, where I dis­cov­ered that rent­ing a car in advance costs about a third what rent­ing a car by walk­ing up to the counter does. Ouch.

At any rate, we were on our way to… Calgary.

Next time: Our adven­tures in Cal­gary and the mountains!

_____________
* This is pure spec­u­la­tion on my part.
** The Via train sta­tion for Bran­don is, iron­i­cal­ly, out­side of Bran­don. (And it’s not so much a “train sta­tion” as it is a “three-per­son shack, usu­al­ly locked”).

Westering: prologue

Last week we were in the West. Alber­ta, to be pre­cise. We board­ed a train on Fri­day evening, and were in Edmon­ton Sat­ur­day morn­ing. We rent­ed a car, drove south to Cal­gary, and spent a few days vis­it­ing with my sis­ter and her hub­by. Tues­day we drove back up to Edmon­ton, hung out with Kath­leen’s sis­ter and her fam­i­ly, then got on the east­bound train on Sat­ur­day evening. By 9 AM Sun­day we were home again.

That’s a cap­sule sum­ma­ry, of course. Over the next few days I’ll drill down in more detail, but for now I’m tired (I think I picked up a cold out West), and so here are some select­ed pic­tures from our trip (some of which will sure­ly be repeat­ed in the next few posts).

Susie and Jeff
My sis­ter and her hubby.

Mountain
You can tell I’m a prairie boy; every time I’m near any moun­tains, I feel the need to record all of them. This is a set of six or so pho­tos, stitched togeth­er with Autos­titch.

Orchids Orchids I almost stepped in this
Some of the plants in Edmon­ton’s Mut­tart Conservatory.

Sharon and Cy
Kath­leen’s sis­ter and her hubby.

The dome
Not far from home, I found myself alone in the dome car with my cam­era and my lit­tle mini-tripod.

More to come!

13 things I have never read or seen

EDMONTON—Everytime I say “I’ve nev­er seen Big Trou­ble in Lit­tle Chi­na” I get an aston­ished gasp from my broth­er-in-law or from my friend the Space Cow­boy. I tell peo­ple I’ve nev­er read Lord of the Rings* or The Hob­bit and they give me that side­ways look like a quizzi­cal dog, as if to say “How do you live?”

So here’s a list of things I’ve not read or seen. Things that may sur­prise you. Or may not.

  1. Solaris–nei­ther the book by Stanis­law Lem, nor either of the film versions.
  2. Glad­i­a­tor, the film by Rid­ley Scott.
  3. Titan­ic, the end­less movie by James Cameron.
  4. Any of Isaac Asi­mov’s Foun­da­tion novels.
  5. Any of Isaac Asi­mov’s nov­els, in fact. I’ve read some of his short fic­tion, but I just could­n’t get into the nov­els, no mat­ter how hard I tried.
  6. Deep Impact. I saw the oth­er dis­as­ter movie that year, Armaged­don, and thought, Meh.
  7. Robert A. Hein­lein’s Stranger in a Strange Land, though I know what “grok” means.
  8. Eragon, and I have no inten­tions of read­ing it either. Or see­ing the movie.
  9. Cow­boy Bebop or most ani­me. For what­ev­er rea­son, ani­me does­n’t turn my crank, although some peo­ple seem to assume it should.
  10. Sev­en Samu­rai or in fact any of Kuro­sawa’s cor­pus. This I intend to remedy.
  11. Any Shake­speare short of a cou­ple son­nets and Mac­beth. This too needs to be remedied.
  12. Any of the egre­gious Dune pre­quels. IMHO, they should’ve just pub­lished Frank Her­bert’s notes and called it a day.
  13. The Stand mini-series, some­thing which I still hope to see sometime.

_____________
* Not strict­ly true; I start­ed, but around the mid­dle of the sec­ond book, I real­ized that I was read­ing a high­ly-detailed trav­el­ogue, where I had been expect­ing an action epic.

Tech­no­rati

Com­ment and I’ll add you! (But since I’m on the road, it may be a lit­tle while before I get around to adding you…)