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March, 2011

  1. This Week By Cameraphone

    March 31, 2011 by Gail

    Purely by chance, I stumbled upon the launch of the city’s Celebrate 27 Arts Fest at Brookfield Place this evening. From the city’s website:

    Celebrate 27 Arts Fest (C27) communicates and celebrates Article 27′s assertion of the universal right of all to participate in the arts and cultural life of the community with a series of events across Toronto from April 1 to April 27, 2011. C27 promotes Toronto’s vibrant cultural and community arts landscape in neighbourhoods across the city and raises awareness of the diverse programs and services offered by local artists, local arts organizations and the City. C27 partners include: Arts Etobicoke, Lakeshore Arts, Urban Arts Community Arts Council, Scarborough Arts, the Neighbourhood Arts Network and City of Toronto Cultural Services and Economic Development. Sponsors include: TD Bank, Canon Canada, Chamber of Commerce of Ontario, Alitalia and the Greater Toronto Airport Authority.

    C27 demonstrates the importance of the arts in our neighbourhoods and of the artists, and community arts organizations who as enablers of creativity, imagination, ingenuity and innovation help strengthen all communities and also build social and economic inclusion in the city’s underserved neighbourhoods.

    I’ll have to check out which events I can make it to — Arts Fest is on from April 1-27. You can find the event guide here. (According to the city’s website, Milano is Toronto’s twin city and they’re one of the sponsors.)

    In other news, the back room was finished yesterday, but I want to make sure the paint is completely dry and the carpet is shampooed before moving anything back in. I’m still rather skeptical about this roof’s structural integrity.

    Though I’ve walked by the Dufferin tunnel’s blinding lights many times, I finally drove through it for the first time on Tuesday when I went to fetch Xena from the vet:

    Last but not least, we’d love more of this weather, especially for shooting this weekend:

    P.S. If you’re finding this website slow to load or not loading at all, you’re not alone. I’ve lodged a support ticket with the host. Thanks for your patience!

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  2. Now, If Only I Sung Opera

    March 30, 2011 by Gail

    … I would want to be like Measha Brueggergosman [Wikipedia]. Except I don’t think anyone could be like her.

    Brueggergosman hails from Fredericton, New Brunswick, having achieved an impressive amount of success as a soprano by the time she reached 30. (She will be 33 this year.) What strikes me about Measha is not just her ability to speak several languages with ease, but her personality combined with her talent and expressiveness (to be expected in theatre, but still notable). She’s making her own way in classical music, a genre where vocalists are older, more experienced, and aren’t sporting nose rings, afros, or even a dark complexion. Go Measha!

    If I had seen the opening ceremony for the Winter Olympics in Vancouver I would’ve seen her perform the Olympic Hymn in amazement. Maybe you did? I watched it on YouTube over a year later. (Isn’t there a better version of this?) Then I clicked over to this video:

    Emergency open heart surgery?!?

    Not being a pop culture maven or a TV-watcher or much of a magazine reader, it appears I’ve missed out on the buzz about this lady: Toronto Life May 2008: The Cult of Measha

    Canadian Business Magazine, October 27, 2010 – The Performer: Canadian soprano Measha Brueggergosman

    There are few videos of her online, but this one’s a good example of her stage presence:

    After watching several of her interviews, it’s easy to see what the buzz is about — in addition to being musically skilled, Brueggergosman is also articulate, passionate, and confident, in a non-diva-ish way. It’ll be interesting to watch her grow as an artist, and humanitarian (she’s AMREF Canada’s Goodwill Ambassador). I may even bump into her sometime because apparently she lives in my neighbourhood. If that does happen, you bet I’ll be writing about it.

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  3. Xena, The (Toothless) Tough Cookie

    March 29, 2011 by Gail

    Poor Xena. She must’ve known what she was in for today because it took me about 20 minutes to catch her this morning. I’m still surrounded by furniture, which leaves Xena plenty of hiding places to escape from me and my arsenal of horrible medical stuff (heart meds and antibiotics) that must taste awful to a cat.

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    The vet pulled one rotten tooth out last Wednesday, and another SIX today, which leaves her with a grand total of FIVE teeth left: the two bottom canines, and three on one side at the bottom.

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    Needless to say, Xena was VERY HAPPY to be on her way home in the evening. I requested her new antibiotics in capsule form rather than liquid because I think she hates the liquid too much. Twice a day, too, it was torture — for her and for me. All I had to do was look Xena’s way and she’d take off, running away from the meds.

    I tried to take a photo with her mouth open but she was far too hyper, as always. The closest I got to an open-mouth photo is the photo you see above.

    Anyhow, this should be the last trip to the vet for a long while (we hope!).

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  4. Finished Roof By April?

    March 28, 2011 by Gail

    Hard to say. This is how things looked as of Thursday:

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    This is how things look currently:

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    They didn’t come by today (Monday), we’ll see if there’s any work being done Tuesday. Xena’s due back at the vet in the early morning, so there will be two grumpy creatures here.

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  5. Have Camera, Will Roam

    March 27, 2011 by Gail

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    My original plan for today was brunch and an engagement shoot in High Park, but the client wanted to postpone the session to a warmer day. I couldn’t pass up all this sunshine even though I had computer work to do today, especially since yesterday’s priority was sleep. (I’m a good sleeper, even though I seem to deprive myself of it all too often.) I brought my camera equipment to brunch so I was ready for anything this afternoon: either a client changing her mind or me going on a photo safari.

    Brunch turned out to be a three-hour affair, and I didn’t even take any pictures at Sophie Mon Petit Cafe believe it or not. But after three hours you bet I was ready to get my butt off the wooden chair and out in fresh — albeit chilly — air.

    Leslieville is the neighbourhood where I had brunch, and I wanted to shoot somewhere around the east side. I live on the west end of the city, but I like exploring the east side because I don’t know it as well. People generally stick to their own neighbourhood and only venture to another if there’s a specific reason, but that’s not just a Toronto thing, it’s a city thing. The bigger the city, the more fragmented it becomes.

    I don’t want to be like that. If there’s tasty Eggs Benedict in the worst neighbourhood in town, I’ll go. Of course! 3am is goon-time, not Benny time, and who eats Eggs Benedict at 3am? Safety in numbers: just bring friends or explore in broad daylight when there are people around. When it’s sunny, that’s when I hit the dark corners of the city. I’m always on the lookout for shooting locations. Today, though, I was drawn towards the water again.

    So where did I go?

    1. Polson Pier

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    2. Riverdale Farm

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    Rolling around in the dirt, like a dog:

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    3. Toronto Necropolis & Crematorium

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    4. I also went to Cabbagetown to eat, but I only have cameraphone pics:

    In Cabbagetown on Twitpic Sweet potato fries, Gourmet Burger Co. in Cabbagetown on Twitpic

    5. Eirann Quay (foot of Bathurst Street, ferry terminal for Billy Bishop Airport)

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    I wanted to go to the Irish Famine Memorial in Ireland Park, but it was closed due to construction.

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    More pics below, or check out the Spring 2011 collection here.

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  6. Roads Less Traveled Launch Party

    March 26, 2011 by Gail

    On Thursday night the crew from Roads Less Traveled threw a launch party for the series at the Gladstone Hotel reminiscent of a summer excursion into nature, complete with trees, a campfire, and beer. (Bears didn’t make the guest list.)

    What is “Roads Less Traveled”? (The Canadian in me wants to insert another ‘L’ in ‘traveled’…)

    Official site: http://www.roadslesstraveled.tv/

    “Roads less Traveled” promises a fascinating look at whole different way of living.

    In this 13 part series, Natalia Kantor travels in search of today’s most unconventional lifestyles around the globe and the people who choose to live them.

    Those people are called Yurt Dwellers, Eco-Warriors, Digital Nomads, New Rich, The Futurists, Burners, Seekers, TEDsters, New Radicals, Mom- trepreneurs and Couchsurfers to name a few.

    They’re everywhere. They’re sitting next to you on the bus hooked in to their iPhone and call it work. They’re traveling the world, experiencing the best planet has to offer, if not by boat, by bike then by using air miles. They’re living in yurts. They’re building earthships. They’re creating radical communities in the desert. They’re experiencing mystical transformations. They’re constructing temples in the caves. They’re planting organic farms, in-house gardens and developing eco-villages. They’re inventing flexible work schedules, retiring early, packing their bags, hitting the road and raising their children with alternative schooling.

    Watch the trailer here:

    I’ve had a special interest in alternative living for some time. I suppose in many ways, my own life has been relatively alternative when compared with, say, my high school classmates. I graduated in a class filled with overachievers, most of whom went directly to university, got careers, got married, and had children. Then there was me. I didn’t do any of that (except marriage and then university a decade later), and I wasn’t going to stick around my conservative community to feel the scorn or pity for being an underachiever. So I left. I needed to make my own life and, in the words of a Glaswegian ex-boyfriend, “find my tribe” (he was sharp, that one).

    Thus began my quest. It’s been an invaluable 20 years of experiential living and learning. For examples of this, I have categories such as Raconteurism, not to mention the ever-growing Travel category (nearly 600 posts right now). Really, the majority of this blog is devoted to a reflection of the live-and-learn.

    In 1998, not long after I started working in equity research, someone who’d been working with me a little while and listening to my stories at the office said:

    You’re like a hippie chick except with a bra and a job.

    That took me completely by surprise but it was hilarious, and quite true. The only other person at my office who’d ever hitch hiked as a primary form of transportation was my boss nearing retirement who was a REAL hippie back in the ’60s, sporting a long beard and a ponytail, living in India wearing Jesus sandals. He’d even turned to fructarianism for a time. That’s hardcore. Especially in contrast with how I knew him, as my suit-wearing boss driving a luxury car less than one mile to work from his condo with the ocean view. Talk about a 180!

    I was never as alternative as he was (nor will I ever desire a high-end lifestyle) but I did live commune-style for a time in a variety of places in Australia, and would entertain the idea of that again. The concept of alternative living is a topic I enjoy discussing with people on a regular basis, if only to get them to express what they want out of life and what they consider important. Shouldn’t we all do that?

    Because of my travel history and more than a decade of couchsurfing, I happen to know quite a few people who have chosen the alternative lifestyle already. The most recent “convert” from convention is my friend Eric who’s living as a Digital Nomad, currently in Southeast Asia. Maybe he’ll be a part of the Roads Less Traveled series, too, if they can catch up with him.

    The launch party itself was very well-attended, which goes to show how much interest people have in exploring alternative ways to live. I’m interested to see what lifestyles they’ll unearth in upcoming episodes. Stay tuned to the website for updates: http://www.roadslesstraveled.tv/

    I uploaded the pictures from the launch party here, to Flickr, and also in a postcard viewer (use your arrow keys to view the pics):

    http://gailatlarge.net/RTL/launch/

    (more…)

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  7. Gladstone Hotel

    March 25, 2011 by Gail

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    Me at the end of the night pretending to dance (ha!), winding down the Roads Less Traveled Launch Party at the Gladstone Hotel. More pics and a post about the party comin’ up.

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  8. There Should Be An Express Lane To The Vet

    March 24, 2011 by Gail

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    I picked up Beano’s ashes yesterday morning at the vet after taking Xena in for her follow-up heart check. It was probably the worst day to do it — spring turned to winter all of a sudden. The vet congratulated me on making it in! But snow wasn’t the only delay, Xena found hard-to-reach furniture to hide under when she saw the carrier. She absolutely HATES the oral heart medication, the poor thing now gets skittish whenever I reach for her. I’m still working out the best technique for giving it to Xena because she shakes her head when I try and squirt it in her mouth, even when I have a firm grip on the scruff of her neck.

    The purpose of this vet visit was to check her heart since I’ve been giving her heart meds, before they do dental work. The doc took Xena into another room and unexpectedly returned with a tooth (I should’ve taken a picture of it) that was ready to fall out and prescribed antibiotics for it. Her next trip back is Tuesday — the other vet wants to check her heart again after some time on the antibiotics. Since she already hates the heart meds, I didn’t need to wonder how she’d handle the liquid antibiotics…

    Needless to say, when all was done Xena was making a beeline for the carrier!

    I got a surprise when I returned from the vet and discovered that Beano’s urn is screwed together at the bottom. At least with Hugh’s ashes, some of which I had scattered over Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome to join David, I was able to open the top and put some in another bag. But to take out some of Beano’s ashes I’ll have to get a screwdriver. I’m in no rush, though. I might scatter Beano’s ashes in the summer, or maybe Arliin’s birthday in October.

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  9. The Roof Repair Saga: Day (?)

    March 22, 2011 by Gail

    roof repair saga

    Roof repair continued today, after a week of work shutdown. Note curious cat getting blasted by flash. Silly cat!

    Of course, the work resumed the morning after I pulled an all-nighter, working until 7am. I should’ve predicted it! The property manager, who assured me she would give me the heads up when work resumed, sent an email at 8:40, which I slept through since I’d only been asleep for an hour. Half an hour later, I heard keys rattling in the door. Minutes later, the pneumatic drills or saws or whatever electrical device sounded like a jackhammer in the ceiling. Kept sleeping. One more hour later, get ready for work.

    And here’s what the roof looks like after a lot of cutting and trimming of the old layers:

    Poor Xena, her ears must’ve been smarting. Tomorrow morning she gets to avoid part of that because she’s going to the vet clinic for a follow-up appointment to check her heart while she’s on medication for heart disease. If only she knew, she’d choose to stay home and put up with the noise. Next up for Xena: teeth extraction! The House of Fielding is a real funhouse these days, it’s Magners to the rescue.

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  10. Adele On 21*

    March 21, 2011 by Gail

    The immensely talented British singer Adele speaks about making her second album, accompanied by her video of “Rolling In The Deep”. I have both albums, the second one I bought over the weekend. The more I listen to Adele the more I like her, and I hope she keeps making music for a long time.

    For one thing, she’s beautiful but she’s down-to-earth and doesn’t look like she’s starving herself. (Plus, her look is very 60′s, which is probably my favourite era, style-wise.)

    And, unlike much of what charts, Adele’s material is actually her own. Apparently this second album was recorded right after a breakup, and no doubt follows the tendency of such events to inspire great art — especially music. Why rant when you can sing it out? (And win accolades and earn lots of money while you’re at it.)

    Favourite tracks on ’21′:

    1. Rolling In The Deep
    6. He Won’t Go
    8. I’ll Be Waiting
    10. Lovesong
    11. Someone Like You

    * Eh. I only just noticed the date.

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