Category: o canada

  • a landmark day in Ontario

    Tim Hortons finally got Interac in Ontario. Western Canadians will no longer be frustrated with their eastern siblings. (well, I’m sure there will be some other bones of contention ….)

    Oh, and we technically implement Kyoto today.

  • clearly an American agency

    Bell Canada’s new slogan “From A to Z, the calls are free” doesn’t quite work here. In this country it would have to be “the calls are fred”.

  • i think not

    Barr’s Irn Bru Irish? Surely not, but that’s what Dominion thinks:

    barr’s irn bru is not irish

  • your vote counts – or does it?

    I was a little bemused about Ontario wanting 21 extra MPs, so I did some sums to see how many MPs each province/territory should have:


    2005 Population ‘Fair’ Ridings Actual Ridings %age over/under represented
    Canada (total) 32,270,500 308 308  
    Newfoundland and Labrador 516,000 5 7 +42%
    Prince Edward Island 138,100 1 4 +203%
    Nova Scotia 937,900 9 11 +23%
    New Brunswick 752,000 7 10 +39%
    Quebec 7,598,100 73 75 +3%
    Ontario 12,541,400 120 106 -11%
    Manitoba 1,177,600 11 14 +25%
    Saskatchewan 994,100 9 14 +48%
    Alberta 3,256,800 31 28 -10%
    British Columbia 4,254,500 41 36 -11%
    Yukon Territory 31,000 0 1 +238%
    Northwest Territories 43,000 0 1 +144%
    Nunavut 30,000 0 1 +249%

    The population data is from StatsCan for 2005, and the riding counts from Wikipedia, and checked on CBC’s election 2006 site. My analysis is a bit simplistic; everyone counted as population gets the same federal representation.

    Ontario, BC and Alberta are getting stiffed. Quebec is the fairest of them all. But if you really want your vote to count, and you can’t handle the Territories, move to PEI.

  • Tim’s Discourse (in which soup nearly comes down Stewart’s nose)

    Grabbed a Tim’s lunch today, and glad I sat in, otherwise I would have missed the following:

    One: I heard this astrologer say the science shows …
    Two: Astrology’s not a science!
    One: Okay, well, but he says a lot of professors agree with him, and he’s got scientists working for him, and he says you can predict things.
    Two: What sort of things?
    One: Well, he said that on 9/11, Saturn and Mars were aligned with Uranus …
    Two: Wasn’t my anus!

    (I think they may have been discussing Richard Tarnas, who was on CBC last night.)

  • oh noes!

    Ghali Kitchen – home of the unbelievable Rasta Pasta – is no longer on Queen West. Seems like they went back to their roots at Queen E and Greenwood.

    They shall be missed, though my cholesterol level will stay sane.

  • worse than no map at all

    I’ve been using my GPS to track roads around the wind farm. I’m most disappointed with the coverage that Garmin’s MetroGuide Canada gives. Sure, Ashfield-Colborne-Wawanosh might not be Canada’s most vibrant metropolis, but it seems that much of the MetroGuide routing is screwy around the Huron shores. A couple of frinstances:

    • Hwy 21 around Goderich is about 100-300m of its location, and the junction from Hwy 8 is almost a kilometre out. The GPS does an amusing “Hey, make a turn … whoa, how’d you get here?” kind of thing as you come into Goderich.
    • According to MetroGuide Canada, you are “Arriving at Lucknow” when you’re on Hwy 21. Lucknow’s almost 20km from Hwy 21. It also doesn’t seem to know about routing along Hwy 86, and also tries to route you across an entirely imaginary road near Belgrave Road.
    • Visiting friends near Wingham last night, the GPS suggested I should go back to Goderich via Clinton, a detour of 20km.

    I know I didn’t really need to use the GPS for this (except I now know how to navigate the backroads of Wingham), but some of the map choices it was giving me were downright useless.

    Helps if you load the right map …

  • bandshell kitty

    There is a timid calico cat that lives in the wing of the Bandshell at ExPlace. There is no picture; I said it was timid …

  • leaving Calgary

    The conference was good (learnt a lot about wind integration and forecasting), but I was most taken with the little Richardson’s Ground Squirrels that lived in burrows around the hotel.

  • run screaming from the building

    I’m attending the CanWEA / AWEA Wind Integration & Forecasting seminar in Calgary. While the hotel is very nice, I should’ve pegged there might be trouble when the room next door to mine is marked Crew Lounge. And yep, between 0100 and 0300, the crew was there. And they lounged loudly.

  • Bluffer’s Park notes

    (click image for gallery)

    Sights: water, bluffs, rock, birds, blue sky.

    Sounds: water, redwing blackbirds, grackles, geese, falling limestone.

    Smells: the lighting of BBQs.

  • no illegalsigns.ca?

    did someone take down illegalsigns.ca? It’s blank today.

  • nasty snow pile

    There is a nasty snow pile at Kennedy Commons:

    yucky snow

    yucky snow

  • jays

    I’m at the Jays game … and it’s a bit slow.

  • économisez les baleines! <beep>

    Greenpeace Canada decided I’m francophone, and so sent me their French welcome package. I don’t particularly mind, but I don’t remember being given a language option.

    I’m not proud of being monolingual (in fact, round these parts I’m sometimes considered nihilingual). At school, if you wanted to take science, you dropped the arts by about age 15. It didn’t help that our school used minging old readers like Aux Pays des Flamantes Roses and used genuine 1960s reel-to-reels with écoutez et répétez <beep>!

  • signs of Canada

    wind turbine and tim hortons, on the road back from Ottawa

    I took this a while back (June 2004), but forgot about it.

  • first groundhog of 2007

    Seen at Warden TTC — spring’s here!

  • five great years

    Catherine & I have been in Canada for 5 years.

  • these ain’t buildings ..:

    … They’re bvildings, the Bay Street stone edifices.