16.9.09

september is always beautiful here

the annual chilliwack airshow is conveniently located 1 block from our house.
great community event

last week kylie and i picked over 20 lbs of sumptuous blackberries on vedder mtn. i froze them for use in smoothies and other fruity drinks, along with a 20 lb flat of blueberries (for $17). i derive a strong dopamine rush from the act of picking berries. much more than is justified by the mere cost savings. my 21st century brain still wants to store up for the winter. niko likes slurping them off the bush as well.

after a busy summer we were able to once again connect with friends.

just this week, we attended our friend madison's second birthday party. where are all the people? checking out uncle kevin's firetruck of course!

"did i hear something about a firetruck?"

i have never been a daschund fan, but butch's new pup wheatsie is super cute.



and of course, the birthday girl graciously opening presents.

9.9.09

precious bodily fluids

"have you ever seen a commie drink a glass of water? vodka... that's what they drink isn't it? never water? and not without good reason."

dr. strangelove (or - how i learned to stop worrying and love the bomb) is my new favourite movie. my friend chris lent it to me quite a while ago b/c he knew how much i liked kubrick as a director. kylie and i put it on, and initially found it funny but quite slow (it was filmed in 1964 - well before "Speed" changed movies and attention spans forever). i think we only managed to watch 30 min before we started falling asleep.

a few weeks ago i put it back in to watch it again while kylie was otherwise occupied. i dont know what changed, but this time i was riveted. the dialogue is so dry and so hilarious. peter sellers is incredible in 3 roles and delivers a subtle comedic performance (at least mandrake and the president are subtle, the eponynymous dr. is anything but) that just isnt seen these days. i have since watched the movie 3 times and gone through all the special features. i love it!

my favourite character by far is general ripper. i was working an overnight shift a few days ago and my brain was in the state common to those who are still awake and trying to function normally at 4:30 in the morning. i had a friendly but fairly intrusive diabetic patient pestering me to give him a prescription for insulin or another sugar lowering medication and i was explaining to him that his problem was dehydration or lack of water. suddenly my voice turned low and gravelly and i started to slur my words like i was holding a cigar in my mouth:

"water, mandrake. water is the source of all life. seven tenths of the earth's surface is water. why, do you realize that 70 percent of YOU is water? as human beings, you and i need fresh pure water to replenish our precious bodily fluids."

the patient did not catch the reference, so i apologized and explained i was quoting dr. strangelove. i didnt realize i had the scene memorized, but it is my favourite and it kept spilling out of me. i then turned to the nurses and intoned once again in a serious gravelly tone:

"mandrake, have you never wondered why i drink only distilled water (or rainwater) and only pure grain alcohol? have you ever heard of a thing called fluoridation? fluoridation of water?"

unfortunately my sleep deprived attempt at humour missed the mark with the nurses as well. none of them had seen the movie either. its funny to me though. i can make myself laugh just thinking about those lines delivered so seriously and mandrake's panicky disbelieving responses.

great movie... although you probably wont like it unless you are sleep deprived or a nuclear policy afficianado. extremely slow paced but funny in a way no movie is funny these days.

31.8.09

To Lethbridge and a bit beyond

I just got home from spending a week in Lethbridge visiting family and friends. (Unfortunately Marc was unable to join me, he was here bringing home the bacon.) We also spent the weekend in the Crowsnest Pass doing a hike and relaxing. I didn't take too many pictures at home but here is a sampling . . .
With my Grandpa

We hiked the incorrectly named "Trail of Seven Bridges" in the Pass. Apparently there were seven bridges to cross the river until last year when they were flooded out. My brother crossed the river on the logs but I am too unbalanced to do that so just put my sandals on and trudged through the streams. As they are glacier fed, they were beyond freezing (what state is that? sublimating?) and a couple of times I actually felt like throwing up. Yes I am a cold wimp, I live in BC!



The view after the last bridge

My momma and I


I also visited some old friends from university and had a great morning reminiscing.
Brad trying to look old and distinguished.
My last evening in Lethbridge I went out for dinner with my dad and brother and sister in law. Afterwards we played crib at Brad and Raquel's. This was my first time playing and although I enjoyed it, it was too much math for me!

Hope you are enjoying the dwindling days of summer, we sure are!

24.8.09

food folks and fun

august has been so packed that there has been no time for a proper blog post. looking at our blog and realizing that it has been well over 2 weeks since our last post, i decided it was time to stop holding out for a thorough tour of august and put up a whirlwind version instead... first up: DJ3J!
josh has once again included us on his yearly sojourn across the oft frozen hinterland of canada. it was a quick visit, but we managed to get in a hike, increasing our flexibility with wii fit,
posing on deconstructed delivery vans,
and eating lots of blackberries!


next came fraser, on his way back from the yukon (as pictured above) with trusty rufus.

mister multiple molten motes showed up at a chaotic time for us, but managed to fit himself into our schedule and even bbq'd up some tasty cedar planked salmon.


fraser is now 2 for 3 on seeing bears when we comes to visit us. this one was lazing on the banks of the fraser after (presumably) gorging himself on blackberries.

once again, we trained both our minds and our bodies with wii fit. josh is naturally very flexible, and fraser is naturally very balanced.

finally (after kylie left for lethbridge for a week and i worked) we got to see our old friend arie. the one who welcomed us to the fraser valley 5 years ago now lives in faraway regina. we met at the langley zoo (that is arie and samuel on the right of the frame).

samuel is certainly energetic, and an absolute delight. who knew a tractor could find gainful employment delivering timbits to ravenous young train engineers? thanks arie and samuel for coming out to play!

and finally i would like to end with a quote from a globe and mail article on aug 21, about an emerging subculture of people who form lasting relationships with inanimate objects:

"Mr. Hall-Ford, who is autistic, says he is currently dating two small soundboards and is careful about telling people why he carries them around. His first heartbreak occurred when he was excommunicated from a church after being told he loved the sanctuary's soundboard more than he loved Jesus."

8.8.09

another alpine adventure

my friend chris booked a float plane in the chilcotin mountains northwest of lillooet on the long weekend. i met up with him in lillooet after a fantastic drive up north of hope into the hills. the road north from lytton to lillooet becomes a slim asphalt track through the arid open forest, and the views of the surrounding mountains were very personal. that could have been dangerous i suppose, as the western slopes in 2 sections were on fire.
we arrived at tyaughton lake, set up camp and went exploring on our bikes. we found some fantastic views and an entire hillside of purple wildflowers. we missed the top of the run we were looking for (the views and the flowers instead) but found some sweet singletrack at the bottom.
sunday morning we loaded our bikes on a plane and flew up to spruce lake, gaining about 500m in elevation.
our landing strip. the ride was much smoother than a commercial flight, and we got to see the mountains up close.

from the lake, we biked a steep rooty uphill singletrack gaining about 700m to cross windy pass.
approaching the pass.

after crossing over we whipped down an alpine singletrack descent into another valley. the scenery was stunning, but i had to keep reminding myself to watch the trail. i fell hard once in this section, i dont remember why.

above is the only picture of me on this post... thanks kevin (chris' friend kevin lugged all his camera equipment up the pass so he could take pictures of us).
some friends from whistler came along on the ride as well. these guys ride crazy singletrack every day and they had LEGS!

the cabin in the background, as well as the previously pictured singletrack, featured in the first scene of the groundbreaking bike movie "the collective".

from the cabin we climbed back up another pass, and then it was an hour of sweet dowhill all the way back to our campsite.
unfortunately, we didnt get to ride on day 3, b/c we were evacuated due to forest fires. they didnt affect the biking terrain, as you can see, there was no smoke in the above pictures, but fires did cut off both roads out of the area. the town of lillooet was evacuated and the wonderful hwy that i came in on was closed. we left in an rcmp led convoy down a forest service road right through the forest fires.
we couldnt really see the actual fires for the smoke until we reached the pemberton valley and looked back at the hills we had just come down.
after all that biking and dusty, smoky driving, a dip in the lake at whistler was the perfect end to an amazing weekend. thanks chris for organizing! we will definitely have to return to explore this mtn range a bit more.

6.8.09

so pitted

our friend rob just linked to this video

"you just drop in... sup aaa aaa aarh! ... then after that, you ride the barrel and get pitted... so pitted"



apparently it's been around for a few years, but i'd never seen it before tonight... i've already watched it ~20 times.

love it!