27 February 2006

Life on the Fjord ...




Fjord, fiord
An ocean inlet
Connects to the Pacific
Canal, sound, arm
Steep-sided walls
Carved deep by an ancient glacier
Norse fjörðr (fjorthr) means firth or inlet
Indian Arm
30 km long (18 miles)
Stretching from Vancouver north towards Squamish
Home to harbour seals
Diving ducks
Eagles
Kayakers
And us!





© Colleen MacDonald 2006

23 February 2006

Looking at you!

I'm looking at you!

I can see by the Site Meter
where you are
around the world
peeking at my world

It's great to imagine
who you are
and what you are doing.

If you feel like sending me an email,
I'd like to know where you live
and what you call it (send the pronunciation)

Thanks for connecting!

13 February 2006

Where the heck is Turin?




Are you as confused as me about where Turin is? If you look on a map of Italy, there is no such place. The town referred to as Turin is actually called Torino. If you travel to the Peidmont region in Italia, all signs read Torino.

Place names is an issue that I have pondered for many years. Why don't we call a city or country by what the people who live there call it?

This issue has arisen lately with the confusion of Turin and Torino. When I heard Turin, Italy on TV recently, I asked people in the room: "...but I thought the Olympics were in Torino?" We were all confused and had to look it up.

In this day and age we don't have any need to anglisize or simplify names. We can call places and people by their real names -- what the name really is. It is a bit insulting, don't you think? We can pronounce any name, even names written in other languages and alphabets. Just tell us how to say it and we can do it.

As a teacher I had many students in my class that kept their real names when they moved to Canada, the names on their birth certificates. No more need to make Man Yee a Mandy or a Sushan a Susan. We can pronounce Kon Woo and Soon as easily as Connor and Sean.

A few years back I traveled in China and visited Guangzhou. I wondered if we were close to Canton. I was already there, they told me -- Canton is now called by its rightful Chinese name -- Guangzhou. Of course it is no more difficult to say Guangzhou as it is to say Canton.

I live near Coquitlam and Tswassen, BC and no one has difficulty with those names.
Some places have changed back to their native names -- the Queen Charlotte Islands are now referred to as Haida Gwaii.

We can say it!

If we can pronounce people's names and place names, why on earth can't we call the city hosting the Olympics by it's real name -- Torino?

And for that matter, why not just start calling every place in the world by what the people there call it.

Let's start a movement.



.© Colleen MacDonald 2006

07 February 2006

Yahk Yahk Yahk

Look who wants to go to Yahk!
Got everything packed...
all ready for Kyle's haircut.
In Yahk.

I wonder if Yahk has a barber shop?
or an orange cat?

Hopefully Nacho and Diva (not pictured)
will watch Kyle on Thursday Feb 9 at 8pm and 11pm PST
on CBC The Hour (might be cable 26)

Fun !

05 February 2006

Where do you get those ideas?


Someone asked me today where Kyle gets his ideas.

I thought about it and thought about it.

He was a regular baby and did all the regular baby things.
His first sentence was "My duck blanket".

Then I remembered that in the Kindergarten Christmas play,
he was a cow. You have to think outside the box to imagine this is a cow.
Or is it thinking outside the circles?

Maybe, just maybe that's what started the ideas...

love, mom!

01 February 2006

Sign, sign, everywhere a sign



Hup two
three four
hup two

Went to Victoria on the weekend to visit our son Scott.
He's going to school there.
On Sunday he took us on a site-seeing tour of the coastline along Esquimalt.
Trees were budding, flowers popping up,
felt like spring was in the air.
Spotted this sign along the way.
As you can see, on this busy stretch of the coast
it's handy to make things clear.
Just in case you want to get through first,
Remember . . .