The price of fish has made fishing a way of life rather than a living. The price of fish at the dock does not cover the costs involved in landing it. One goes to sea in the hopes of getting enough weeks employment to draw UI the remainder of the year. It is difficult to feel sympathy for the fish processing conglomerates when they whine that a break even price for fish might cut into their profits.
My Blog List
-
Rescue Special Ops4 months ago
-
Tom Brown's Schooldays9 months ago
-
Brian Adams9 years ago
-
Trinity11 years ago
-
Handle a Dog Attack - wikiHow17 years ago
-
Born on a mixed subsistence farm in rural Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia, Canada. Moved to Ontario in 1967 to attend University at what was then Waterloo Lutheran University and moved to Oakville, Ontario in 1971. Without intending to live up to the name became a letter carrier the following January and have worked for Canada Post ever since. I retired in August of 2008.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Give the Fisherman a Break
The price of fish has made fishing a way of life rather than a living. The price of fish at the dock does not cover the costs involved in landing it. One goes to sea in the hopes of getting enough weeks employment to draw UI the remainder of the year. It is difficult to feel sympathy for the fish processing conglomerates when they whine that a break even price for fish might cut into their profits.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Education Experts?
- The new math and calculators in the classroom
- Open concept schools
- The idea that self expression is more important than grammar or spelling
- The belief that failing a kid and separating him from his peer group was more damaging than the fact he wasn’t learning.
- Cuts to phys-ed programs
What we got were
- Bank tellers who use a machine to subtract 3000 from 5000 and don’t realize they have a problem if the answer they get is 200
- Buildings no one has a use for
- University students who can’t spell or write a proper sentence
- Adults who are functionally illiterate.
- The first generation in 200 years that will live shorter lives than their parents because they’re obese.
Do we trust them when they tell us that libraries are replaceable in a digital age or that music programs are a luxury when budgets are tight.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Overdo Rant
A rant this as I have little else to write about. After 45,000 miles and 3 years it’s a strange feeling to feel uncomfortable in one’s own home. I’ve lived in the same Condo apartment for over 3 decades but these days my RV has become home. Somehow it’s unsettling to know you have something but not remember where you placed it three years back. There’s more space in the bedroom of my two-storey apartment than my entire motorhome so I’m suddenly feeling somewhat exposed. And then there’s the almost constant annoyance of discovering that items one uses every day are somewhere else.
After surviving the border crossing at Detroit/Windsor I made it to the one campground open this time of year east of London Ontario and found no one in charge. Hung around a few days as I had no desire to drive in gusting crosswinds. Managed to get caught up online as once home I have no regular internet connection and no phone. At least the security system let me in the door and the keys to my apartment worked.
Wading through six month’s mail is tedious. Appointments with two banks and three doctors relieved by pleasant relationships. Visits to various shops and the licence bureau mundane. Catching up on old acquaintances bittersweet. Returning to all the maintenance items I left behind me when I escaped on my four tires irksome and wearing.
On my way from Windsor drove by the Norfolk Dump which has decided to refuse further garbage from Toronto. I recognized it from the earthen wall on the north side of the highway and the trail of plastic bags stuck in the trees south of the highway.
Just brought up the loaf of ‘brown bread’ I purchased over a month ago and am marvelling at the fact that 30 days past its best before date there’s no sign of mould. What witch’s brew of chemicals does it contain that it does not mould? Furthermore what food value can there be in a product that cannot support such growth. Still on the subject of food having recently restarted my apartment fridge and turned off my RV to defrost it occurs to me to wonder how anyone survived before such modern conveniences. Hygienists recommend that food be refrigerated or thrown out within two hours of preparation. What would they have to say about pease porridge in a pot nine days old?
Crime is down across North America because the 16-32 demographic which commits the bulk of violent crime is at an all-time low. At the same time the number of people having reached retirement age is out-numbering those still working to support them to an alarming degree. It recently came to light that even the mighty Ontario Teacher’s fund is laying out 1.8 Billion more than it earns per year; what does that say for smaller plans? Pesky seniors are living too long. Actuarial tables are going to be seriously revised.
Having read War, Sebastian Junger’s tale of being embedded with troops in Afghanistan and watched Restrepo, the video documentary of the same encounter it was with some sadness I read of the death in Libya of Ted Hetherington, the photographer who shot it. Yet another reporter killed in the line of fire.
After rewatching several day’s worth of favourite DVD’s Malthus Law of Diminishing Returns begins to set in. There is little likelihood, however, of my ever running out of books to read in my library. Having invoked Sebastian Junger I have moved on to the author Linda Greenlaw, the other swordboat captain in The Perfect Storm. The notoriety generated by the book and subsequent film persuaded her to take up pen and publish The Hungry Ocean, which details a one-month fishing trip to the grand banks.
Somewhere in Southern Ohio I outran Spring and to date it has yet to arrive in Ontario. Out East the Maritimes have had the coldest April on record. At the same time gasoline prices are reaching toward new highs. What can I say? Guess I’m going to have to cope with my issues here at home for a while. Life is quiet here, Harry would find me too old for an invite to the all-nighter he pulled at Buckingham Palace and I would lack the stamina for such an event in any case. Some pad to throw a party though.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Heading North
I don’t normally make reservations but the Louisville KOA Deal persuaded me to break my practice--bad move. I made it to Sheperdsville before the Thunderstorm, high winds, and Tornado Watch struck. Seems I reached the middle of nowhere. To the west the guns of Fort Knox boomed when Odin wasn’t hammering on the roof of the world. I soon discovered that high-speed internet has passed by this part of the world. Those bits and bytes are carried by snails here. Photo-finishes aren’t necessary here but the unpaved laneways have a Kentucky Derby Theme. After the cold front came through the temperature plummeted nearly 30 degrees.
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
The day dawned with an azure blue sky with only a few fleecy clouds, light breezes, but cold. After the usual preparations drove over to the commercial area of Shepherdsville adjoining the highway and took the road between MacDonalds and Wendys as directed to find Krogers. Decided that since this is my second such visit that perhaps I should possess their loyalty card. This is only the 8th such card I’ve picked up in my travels; some stores use guest cards but not this one and the savings are quite significant--10% of my grocery order. The aisles of this store were blocked with what appeared a truckload of newly arrived goods and goods returned to a freezer that had recently been repaired. Add people in power-assisted carts and staff and getting around was difficult. Always interesting to note the items unique to an area. Big chains tend to even things out but there are always a few items that stand out. Like the catfish in the fish section and the fact that there was a fish market. Often items in the ready-made section stand out. Alas the selection of beers here could have appeared in any major grocery store across America.
At the gas pump outside I used my card again to save 3¢ a gallon though gas at $3.61 a gallon hardly seemed a bargain.
Wednesday, April 06, 2011
Drove up to Cincinnati. After Louisville I-71 was one big long construction project. At least it wasn’t a long drive. I’ve become accustomed to following the GPS so I hadn’t noticed that one doesn’t enter Ohio until one crosses the river and enters Cincinnati. The city seemed to drag on forever but eventually I reached the suburbs and my Hamilton County Campground.
Thursday, April 07, 2011
A beautiful day for a wonderful seven-mile bike ride around a spectacular park. Spring is happening and the birds, flowers, trees, frogs and fish are active. This park is an oasis of quiet close to such a large urban centre, the only sign of the world at large being the whistles of a distant train. Pumpkin Pie ice cream is good. A wren sat on the seat of my bicycle and serenaded outside my window.
Friday, April 08, 2011
The predicted rain has not obtruded to any large degree but the sky has remained largely overcast save for a brief stroke of sunlight in camp before I left this morning. Stopped at an Ohio Visitors Centre to pick up a map of the state and other info. Getting through the city of Dayton was tense but after that my route passed through rolling countryside. When I got off the highway at Wapakoneta I discovered that the town hosts several major truck stops. For once the KOA Kampground was exactly where the MS Streets Map placed it and the owners opened the office to welcome me. I was directed to a discount grocery store however I was not warned that the place accepts cash and debit cards only.
That evening I drove 5 miles east on Ohio 33 to find a former middle school which is now home to The Famous Tradition Music Company. The former classrooms and hallways are home to the largest collection of stringed instruments, antique clocks, storage cases, and vinyl records I’ve seen anywhere. At six I went back in to witness the 3-hour Blue Grass Jam and don’t expect to hear better banjo or mandolin playing anywhere. The folk/country jam down the hall in the kitchen was larger and had a mike but I returned to the Blue Grass. Best of all, the ‘show’ was free. Backing into a strange site with a tree nearby in the dark was tense but I managed it.
Saturday, April 09, 2011
Toured the Neil Armstrong Space Museum opened in 1973 five years after the moon walk in July of 1969. A gentleman and his teenaged son who were doing the tour with me was born on the exact day. The museum was remarkable for the fact that all the ‘toys’ still worked. The docking simulator, the Eagle Lander, and other gadgets all performed. Outside was a jet which Armstrong once flew along with a mock-up of the Apollo Capsule. Inside was Armstrong’s first open-wing plane, an early jet; seems at sometime he flew virtually every craft that had wings. The museum is filled with a collection of memorabilia including his high school yearbook, baby pictures, team shots, various uniforms, disgusting looking tubes of food, awards and certificates, and pictures with everyone from Khrushchev to Nixon. Behind a door marked private was the paraphernalia of elimination in space. The 25-minute movie was projected on the inner wall of a moon shaped dome that sticks out of the museum built into a side hill. The only credit was an ad at the beginning from the producers. A tour of the town revealed a market town for the surrounding countryside with the usual impressive civic buildings and banks. The railway runs through the middle of the town and is a very busy line.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
After my hostess called the pastor I found my way Sunday morning to St Marks Evangelical Lutheran Church on Pearl St. The ringing of their carollonic bells on an exposed thirty-foot tripod first attracted my attention. I was greeted by a council member who eventually sat with me because his wife works a 4 AM shift at Wal-Mart. About 130 people were accompanied by a pipe organ and choir in singing though the Cantor managed to fumble chanting the Psalm. An excerpt from the movie Jesus of Nazareth was projected on a screen in lieu of the reading of the Gospel Lesson of the raising of Lazarus. The sermon was marked by a power-point presentation. My friend failed to recommend any place in town to go for brunch so I rode home.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Was awakened by cacophonous rainfall if not the thunder that preceeded it. Not having an interest in driving in it I went back to bed and slept until a robin pecking at its reflection in my rear window woke me at 10:30. The drive up to Toledo was unremarkable save for the wind that developed just as I was arriving in Perrysburg. The KOA Kampground in a stand of second growth forest was serviceable but nothing special. The two for one deal made it acceptable. The wind continued overnight and blowing from the north was like to return me south Tuesday Morning. Tonight’s overnight low of 32 feels ominous.
Thursday, April 07, 2011
My Kind of Cop
After 40 Years, Still at Home in the Trenches
By AL BAKER
Published: April 3, 2011
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Rain Over Nashville
Saturday morning there was a complimentary breakfast here at the campground--pancakes and sausage patties, fruit punch and coffee--the coffee was actually very good--the urn makes good coffee. That evening the Grand Ole Opry. On Sunday I walked up to the corner 3 miles round trip to check out the strip up to the Grand Ole Opry entrance. Two more campgrounds: Two Rivers and Yogibear and no less than three RV sales and service centres. On the opposite side of the road is a 6-lane freeway--I now have an intimate knowledge of engine brakes. What one fails to notice when driving by on a bus is the amount of farmer’s fields and bush that still remain. Lost count of the number of Inns, Motels, and Hotels but there's a parcel of them; seemed like we stopped at em all on the way to the Opry on Saturday.
Although I saw signs for the highly recommended Showney’s I just couldn’t find it. When I asked at the Grayline office I was told cross the parkway. Well it wasn’t the other side of the highway but I did find it. The brunch buffet held Chowder and cornbread, biscuits and gravy, scrambled eggs and mushroom, strips of french toast and sauce, bacon and chicken fried chicken, salad, and fruit salad. The coffee was good as well. Somehow I defeated the purpose of my walk.
Sunday Evening after a long afternoon nap loaded up my laundry and went up to the Main Building for Spaghetti and Meatball while the wash churned next door. While the clothes dried took in a concert at the Barn--Oldies sung to a Karaoke Machine and Johnny Counterfeit doing imitations. Took off just after dawn next morning.
Sunday, April 03, 2011
Grand Ole Opry
Our driver Pat was a hoot though tipping for a $5 2-mile drive seems excessive. I was thankful I didn’t have to back that bus into tight entrances and negotiate vehicle-clogged narrow campground laneways.
The stage-manager/announcer had a podium left- stage and each of the four segments had a nominal host. The only act all evening familiar to me were the Gatlin Brothers from Texas, I’d heard the name Riders in the Sky. What a Korean Comedian had to do with the Grand Ole Opry I couldn’t say.
I’ve always complained that once an artist makes it to Nashville his music suddenly loses its acoustic touch and becomes over-produced. A large house band supports most groups on stage and although few main acts were overshadowed only the comedian got a solo performance. In contrast Segovia played the 4500-seat Salle Wilfred Peltier, Place Des Arts with 500 seated on the stage behind him playing a single fragile classical guitar. Mind you he demanded management turn off the escalators and the air conditioning and dared anyone to cough, but he made that audience listen.
The true stars of the Opry are the stage crew doing set-up for 20-odd acts in 2 hours setting mikes and plugging in instruments with narry a wow or pop all evening.
Friday, April 01, 2011
The Rich get richer and the Poor get poorer
Top-paid Ont. civil servants list jumps 11%
CBC News
Posted: Mar 31, 2011 2:22 PM ET
Last Updated: Mar 31, 2011 6:55 PM ET
The number of Ontario public sector workers earning more than $100,000 in 2010 jumped 11 per cent from the year before, according to numbers released Thursday.
Despite struggling with a provincial deficit of more than $16 billion, Ontario’s so-called sunshine list of provincial civil servants whose taxable earnings exceeded $100,000 last year rose to 71,478.Ontario's sunshine list
Below are links to PDF files that list the names and salary of every Ontario civil servant earning more than $100,000. The PDFs are broken down into general categories.
Legislative (106 KB pdf)
Ministries (1.3 MB pdf)
Judiciary (106 KB pdf)
Hydro (1.6 MB pdf)
Hospitals (1.1 MB pdf)
Crown Agencies (537 KB pdf)
Municipalities (2.2 MB pdf)
Colleges (352 KB.pdf)
Universities (1.8 MB pdf)
Schools (1 MB .pdf) Other (479 KB .pdf)
The top earner was Ontario Power Generation president Tom Mitchell, who took home more than $1.3 million last year.
In 2009, there were 64,132 people on the list.
Government sources told CBC News that while the number of people earning above the $100,000 mark has grown, the average salary of people on the list is one per cent lower than it was last year.
According to numbers from Statistics Canada, only 6.2 per cent of the overall Canadian population earns more than $100,000 a year. Government sources said about five per cent of the broader public-sector workforce made the latest sunshine list.
The Ontario government began releasing the list of $100,000-plus earners in 1995. The list includes any public servant whose salary is derived from provincial money, including municipalities.
Other higher earners last year included Canada's new Gov.-Gen. David Johnston, who earned a little more than $1 million as president of the University of Waterloo, and Laura Formusa, CEO of Hydro One, who earned $955,000.
Bob Bell, the CEO of University Health network, earned a salary and benefits totalling more than $830,000.
The McGuinty government ordered all provincial government-funded agencies this week to cut executive salaries and expenses by 10 per cent in the next two years.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Discovering Nashville
That Franklin south of Nashville is the home of the Franklin Mint. I dare not go there lest I do the place violence on behalf of Letter Carriers everywhere. Do you suppose they smash those figurines before they leave the plant?
The price on Minnie Pearl’s hat was $1.98. No surprise, that wasn’t her real name.
That Nashville had the first FM Radio Station in the US?
The overnight temperature here was 39º F Monday night. Not so bad compared to that in Toronto or Halifax but cool nevertheless. At least I had an electrical hookup last night.
Now if Donald Smith were still alive what would he say about my being in Nashville?
I went on the Day Trip around Nashville Tuesday. It was nice of the sun to hang in there until the cloud cover settled in as we were getting on the bus to return and the rain to hold off until I was finally home at the end of the evening. When the skies opened up it thundered and poured.
Our tour guide/driver was a wealth of information. Who knew that aside from being home to the music industry Nashville is also a major educational centre boasting a score of Universities and a Religious Centre as well hosting the head offices and conference centres of several denominations. A city of 600,000 has 700 churches and about 1600 bars.
Any discussion of Nashville would have to begin with the longest running radio show in America, the Grand Ole Opry. Once it took on a live audience it began a tradition of outgrowing it’s venues. The Ryman Auditorium, its 4th home, began life as a church; it may no longer be a consecrated space but for Country Music Fans it is nevertheless a shrine. I was not tempted to pay $5 to have my picture taken on that stage with a cheap guitar but I would have liked to test out the acoustics reputed to be second only to the Tabernacle in Salt Lake City. After all, when the Reverend preached his hell-fire sermons there were neither mikes, amplifiers nor speaker systems. After the Opry moved to its new 4400-seat venue 14 miles distant down the road from the KOA the pews were restored, removing decades of parked chewing gum and concerts resumed some years later.
Most music may be recorded digitally these days and listened to on CD or MP3 Players but the gold standard of the recording industry is still the vinyl record and at the Country Music Hall of Fame Gold Records overcrowd a wall three storey’s high by a city block in length. For the record a gold record has shipped 500,000 copies; a platinum, 1,000,000; and a diamond, 10,000,000. The Hall of Fame acts as an archive and public exhibit of the excesses of the Music Industry beginning with the shape of the building itself. Want to go for a ride in Elvis’ Gold Cadillac? If you lose a hubcap remember it’s gold plated. I wonder how good the reception was on that TV. I’d still like to hear that golden grand piano. Everything from Minnie Pearl’s hat with price-tag--$1.98 to studded, spangled and florescent coloured outfits are on display. Listening kiosks play hits of the past and life-sized mock-ups welcome you in. Tailoring jeans so that the stars look poured into them must be an industry all on its own. Squeezing ‘that’ part of the anatomy obviously doesn’t effect the ability to reach those low notes.
On another road lie the historic recording studios. RCA, Sony, BMI. You knew one of them was owned by Micheal Jackson? One artist it is quipped made her first hit when her car rammed the recording studio. And then the lesser performance spaces. Honky Tonks and Saloons line entire streets where performers work for tips. And if they aren’t performing probably wait tables. At Legends the walls were decorated by entire collections of Sun Records, the doors with life-size images of the greats. At Legends the performer welcomed our tour guide by name.
If you make public performance of Happy Birthday expect ASCAP to come knocking on your door to collect royalties on behalf of the two little old ladies who own the copyright. Anonymous may not collect his royalties but ASCAP does it on behalf of everyone else for anything not in the public domain.
Beyond the music industry Nashville has Federal, State, and City Offices and Courts. Our tour guide made sure we saw several nude statues including a large grouping celebrating the music industry. This wasn’t the only public art to win his ridicule. What looks like the twisted remains of a roller coaster in red is a million dollar public work. Office towers have nicknames including one that looks like Batman. Public Parks and the Bicentennial Mall are graced by more statuary, gardens, fountains, and at present flowering Redbuds. Did you know Nashville had its own full-scale model of the Parthenon with an art gallery inside? A militia group running wind sprints and lifting weapons cases out front were an odd touch.
Nashville also boasts businesses associated with the medical industry. Insurance Companies, Health Care providers and Research facilities associated with the universities including the Sarah Cannon Cancer Research Centre--Minnie Pearl I discovered. After all that rubber-necking I was glad that someone else was negotiating streets alive with after-school crowds and commuter traffic on the four major Interstate Highways that intersect in Downtown.
After a quick supper I wandered over to the Benny Goodman Music Barn here at the KOA for a free performance by Tailor Made Fable a five-man group of up and coming artists from Quebec City who live onsite and act as park house-band. The performers and staff out-numbered the audience but the performance was remarkably good. Four guitars and drummer make an interesting collective. Hope they manage to survive the industry and each other. Jeans, it seems, still need to be skin tight but nowadays the belt line is barely above the crotch.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Day Seven
Driving into Nashville after the unobstructed drive along the trace was nerve-wracking. Drivers seemed to be rather polite in allowing others to make left turns between intersections but the pedestrians in downtown were downright rude.
Finding my way to the KOA Site in what I assume is East Nashville involved what seemed to be an endless drive along parkways and expressways. My GPS began the day by asking me to make a turn that led to a dead end, I thought I knew better but drove up to the cul de sac on miss-placed faith. Today it took me on a merry chase through Nashville.
Like so much of Tennessee and even the Grand Ole Opry this Campground suffered from flooding. Much of it looks newly rebuilt including the Main Building. The young staff were polite and smiling. I even got a guided tour to my campsite. The grounds are littered with spiny tree cones. The washroom looks new and modern. Already at 6 PM it’s starting to cool off.