Search This Blog

Sunday, October 28, 2012

POSTING #155


PAUSE IN THE POSTS

It seems that I have some medical issues to deal with.

There will have to be a pause in the Postings until the doctors have finished with their testing, poking and prodding.

Hopefully the pause won't be too long---just a short 'pause that refreshes'.

See you soon.

John


----------------------------------------------------------------------

There is a new Icewine Guru Posting (#15, November 15th) in which the Guru castigates Romney and extracts some lessons from the US presidential election. http://theicewineguru.blogspot.ca/




Sunday, October 21, 2012

POSTING #154


THE BATTLE OF QUEENSTON HEIGHTS

Last weekend, after more than six years of planning, the re-enactments of the Battle of Queenston Heights and the Burial of General Brock took place.

The email below, addressed to the two Federal Ministers involved in supporting the 1812 Bicentennial, mirrors what seems to have been the reaction of most of the 15,000 people who attended the events.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

From: Family Near
Subject: 200th Anniversary Battle of Queenston Heights: Well Done Parks Canada and The Ministry of Canadian Heritage

Dear Honourable Ministers Kent and Moore:

I am writing to congratulate both your Departments for the outstanding commemorative ceremonies that marked the 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Queenston Heights and the death of Major General Isaac Brock, which took place this past weekend (13-14 Oct) at Niagara on the Lake / Queenston, Ontario.

Our family drove from Kanata, Ontario to Queenston Heights and the town of Niagara on the Lake specifically to see and participate in this event, and we were not disappointed!  Indeed, we were immensely impressed with the manner in which Parks Canada, the Friends of Fort George and the Ministry of Canadian Heritage planned and oversaw both the re-enacted Battle of Queenston Heights on the Saturday, followed on Sunday by the sombre "funeral" procession and entombment of MGen Brock and his ADC LCol John Macdonnell, at Fort George.

The planning and organization required to effect this commemoration must have been immense, involving as it did more than a thousand re-enactors representing British regulars, Canadian Militia and US forces.  However, I can assure you, Honourable Ministers, that the combined efforts of your staffs and the Friends of Fort George, was superb in every respect.  Certainly, the 15,000 people who attended this re-enactment were provided with a tremendous visual and emotional Canadian historical experience, along with an appreciation that the bravery and sacrifices made in 1812 are what allowed the Canada of today to exist!   It was also gratifying to see attendance by a large number of civic officials from all levels of Government, including the Minister of Justice (Hon Rob Nicholson)

So, well done to both your Departments, with special kudos to Parks Canada for their appreciation of Canadian history and their ability to make it come alive!   I feel that my taxpayer dollars have been very well spent here!

Yours sincerely
Robert Near
29 Cheltonia Way,
Kanata, Ontario, K2T1G6

-------------------------------------------------------------

Unfortunately, I missed the whole thing!

I had volunteered to be on Queenston Heights in my 1812 costume to help direct the crowds, and was really looking forward to all the “pomp and circumstance”.

Then a few days before the weekend, I fell ill and had to withdraw.

Oh well, there are several important events next year, such as the Battle of Fort George, and the Occupation and Burning of the Town.

Health permitting, I will be there!

000

WHAT TO DO ABOUT DRIVERS WHO TAILGATE?

The Queen Elizabeth Way (the QEW---which our GPS insists on called ‘Cue’) is getting more and more congested. Impatient drivers do stupid and dangerous things such as speeding excessively (come on, we all speed a bit, but anything over 130 KMS is ridiculous) and weaving in and out of lanes without warning.

And tailgating!

We were lucky to have escaped several near-accidents recently, in each case with some idiot right on our tail. If there had been an accident, the tailgater would have ended up inside---or on top of--- our car.

I was reminded of a BBC program from the 1960s on safe driving. British roads at the time were more than a bit treacherous. There were three-wheeled Messerschmitt cars chugging along at 30 miles an hour and Jaguars whipping past them at 100 plus MPH. You never knew what you would encounter around the next bend.

After a few horrendous accidents, the BBC decided to do some research on safer driving.

One of the experts on the program was the popular British racing driver, Stirling Moss who, Wikipedia notes, was called "the greatest driver never to win the World Championship". I remember three things about the program. One was Moss’s description of how to handle curves at high speed: hit the brakes going into the curve and then accelerate like hell coming out of it.

The second was his description of how he relaxed after a day of racing. He had a hot water tank in his London apartment that kept the water at precisely his favourite bath temperature. As he got close to his apartment, he could flick a switch in the car and his bathtub would fill automatically. In the pre-electronic age of the 1960s, that was impressive. Once at home, he stripped off his clothes and jumped into a soothing tub.

The third thing I remember was the program’s advice on how to deal with tailgaters: you should slow down so as to increase the space between your car and the car ahead. This would provide a ‘cushion’ of space in case the car ahead had to stop suddenly. In that event, you could slow down gradually so the idiot tailgater wouldn’t end up in your glove compartment.

The program also said that slowing down would make it easier for the tailgater to overtake you and be on his/her way.

The slowing down has always seemed to me to be good advice but some tailgaters---obviously infuriated by the widened gap between us and the car ahead---press in even closer to our car.

A friend deals with that problem by turning on his windshield washers. The airstream carries some of the washer liquid over his car and onto the windshield of the tailgater. The problem is that at 100 KMS, I am not sure how safe it is to distract the person who is breathing down your neck.

In England in the 1960s, a Canadian friend with a British-born wife had another solution. The wife printed a large sign with the word ‘NIT’ on it---NIT being short for ‘nitwit’ and British for 'idiot'. Whenever anyone followed her and her husband too closely, she showed the sign through the back window.

I’m not sure that holding up a sign that said something like ‘IDIOT’ would work too well in Canada (or the US!). The result would probably be a classic case of road rage.

By the way, that British-born wife was (and is) a very skilled knitter. After they returned to Canada, she was asked by the Canadian Government to knit a sweater that was later presented to Prince Charles during one of his visits to Canada.

After that, we all referred to her as the Royal (K)nit.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The US Presidential Election is heating up and I expect that the Icewine Guru will soon have something to say. http://theicewineguru.blogspot.ca/




Sunday, October 7, 2012

POSTING #153


WHAT’S OLD IS NEW AGAIN

In the last Posting (#152) I spoke about the potato peeler and the “Pete-the-Peeler” salespeople who persuaded us to give up the paring knife.

In this Posting I would like to talk about another kitchen gadget that our family had when I was growing up.

But first, I need to set the stage a little.

I like honey, especially the delicious wild flower variety produced by brother Jim and sister-in-law Fannie. When I am lucky enough to get some of Jim and Fannie’s honey I decant it into recycled plastic containers, with a screw top cap. (See the photo)


But honey is sticky stuff and no matter how carefully I pour the honey I get spillage down the side. I have to wash the plastic container under the hot water tap every few times I use it.

Something else you need to know is that I like honey in my Starbucks decaf latté. Most of the Starbucks stores have offered plastic honey containers of the kind shown in the photo on the right.

But Starbucks cafes have been doing away with honey because, I suspect, of the stickiness of the containers. Instead they have been offering Demerara sugar, which is a fine, noble product but definitely not a substitute for honey.

And then this past week I found a Starbucks that was once again offering honey, not in a plastic container, but in a glass jar with a spring-mounted blade that opens to let the honey out and then closes---with no mess, and no stickiness.  (See the photo below.)




I asked one of the staff (I guess they call them ‘Baristas’) about the new honey jars. She was young and enthusiastic, “Aren’t they amazing!”

I agreed but added that when I was growing up---before the wheel was invented---we had a similar container that we used to dispense corn syrup (Beehive, as I recall).

She looked at me sceptically, as though I was having her on. I could tell that as far as she was concerned this was a brand new product of the very latest 21st century technology.

Instead of arguing with her, I asked her where the store had bought it. She called over the manager and explained my query. “Aren’t they wonderful!” , the manager enthused.

It turned out that they had purchased them from a restaurant supply company, but the manager suggested I check out Williams-Sonoma or some other high-end kitchen store.

I found that Bed Bath and Beyond had a stock of them and bought two---one for wildflower honey, and the other for buckwheat honey, which I also like. They work beautifully with nary a drop of sticky honey.

I’m puzzled about why we forgot about these glass dispensers. Did they get left behind in our mindless dash toward everything plastic?

I don’t know but I’m glad that something that was old is new again.


THE BATTLE OF QUEENSTON HEIGHTS IS FINALLY HERE!!

After several years of planning we are about to experience the re-enactment of the Battle of Queenston Heights. A thousand Canadian, American and First Nation volunteers will be firing muskets and cannons on Saturday, October 13th.  The following day, October 14th, there will be the re-enactment of the burial of General Brock who was killed leading his troops into battle at Queenston Heights.

It promises to be a spectacular event, probably the largest military re-enactment ever staged in Canada. Just in case you are interested in attending here is a fact sheet prepared by The Friends of Fort George:

“Next weekend, 1000 volunteer reenactors will descend upon Queenston Heights.
There is educational programming on the Heights Friday and some great events in Lewiston, New York Friday night including Fireworks and Cannons at 7pm. (which can be viewed from the Canadian side in the village of Queenston). The action really gets underway on the morning of the battle anniversary, October 13th. On Saturday morning at 10am, a plaque honouring the home that held General Brock’s body during the battle, after he was fatally wounded, will be marked in a ceremony on Queenston Street in the village of Queenston.
At 11am on the Heights, the Historic Sites and Monuments Board will unveil a plaque honouring Major General Sir Isaac Brock as a person of National Significance. There will be tours of the battlefield and you can climb the Monument. Period entertainers like Muddy York, Gin Lane and the Queenston Ladies Choir will perform during the day.
Starting out @ 9:30 a.m. the troops will be marching from Fort George to Queenston as the cannons boom from the Heights. There will be warm, tasty food and beverages available at General Brock’s Store and historic merchants offering their unique wares at Queenston Heights.  At 3pm, the battle re-enactment will take place in the park and it will be followed at 4:30pm by a commemorative service at Brock’s Monument.
Spectacular Fireworks, framing Brock's Monument, will end the day at 7:15pm.
Dress for mid-October weather and bring a lawn chair or blanket to sit on. Rain or shine, the battle goes on.
If you plan on attending, the only parking cost is $5.00 to park on the Heights. A better alternative will be to park for free at other locations along the Parkway, from the rear lot of the Niagara Parks Butterfly Conservatory all the way to Fort George National Historic Site, and ride the new WEGO buses for free. The buses will run from 9am to 9pm with pick-ups every 20 minutes at six stops along the North Parkway.
On Sunday October 14th, the funeral of Isaac Brock and his Canadian aide de camp John Macdonell will be recreated in old town Niagara-on-the-Lake and Fort George.  The procession leaves Fort George at noon, arriving at the Old Court House on Queen Street at 12:30 pm. Following a short commemoration, the caskets of Brock and Macdonell will be placed on horse-drawn wagons and the procession continues to St. Mark's Church, where Carilloneur Richard M. Watson from Georgetown, Ohio, will play “Onguiaarha”, by Canadian Composer Michel Allard, an original piece commissioned by St. Mark’s to commemorate the bicentennial. The procession will then proceed to Fort George where a Drumhead service will take place at the bastion, where Brock was buried in October 1812. Cannons will be fired from both Fort George and Fort Niagara
‘Come all you brave Canadians’ - as the song from 1812 proclaimed, and mark this important date in the story of our Canada.”

For more information see the Niagara-on-the-Lake 1812 Bicentennial website 

---------------------------------------------------------------------

The Battle and the Burial are the last major Bicentennial events for Niagara-on-the-Lake for 2012 so after the coming weekend I should be able to get back to my old schedule of a new blog Posting every Sunday morning.

Next year there will be more events that may interfere with my schedule of Postings. For example, there will be the capture of Fort George and of the Town by the Americans in June, the occupation of the Town until December; and then the burning of the Town in December.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The US Presidential Election is heating up and the Icewine Guru offers his views on the VP debate in Posting #13, uploaded on October 12, 2012: Icewine Guru blog.