Friday, October 23, 2009
See what you are missing
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Ahoy matie
Friday, October 9, 2009
Another day in the life of Ivan Ivanovich
I drove back from the hardware store in a pouring rain, wind from the North, again, only 2 of the three wind turbines working, just like this Spring and this Summer. Either the folks up here in the Northern Bruce Peninsula Municipality aren't using electricity, or, the resting wind turbine is still malfunctioning. To support the former hypothesis, there are no lights across the way even though this is the Canadian Thanksgiving holiday. I am the only one here on Little Pike Bay. I am doing my best to use all the electricity those turbines can generate. As the wind has die recently, I probably am using the electricity from Bruce Nuclear, a more consitent base of generation. To support the latter hypothesis, several times this last Spring and Summer there was a crane with its arm raised tinkering with the balky windmill. Wind turbine reliability is an issue it seems. If we hitch a ride on the "alternative energy" boat with its unproven and currently evolving (ie, over several decades) technology, we may find ourselves crashed up on the rocks, lights out and in the cold. Enough said.Tuesday, July 28, 2009
An outing on a Tuesday night
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Clinging to thoughts of summer
Clinging to thoughts of summer, I sit inside, sliding-glass door half open; I see the lightning and hear the thunder while the rain pat pat pats the deck. It didn’t start out as an all day rain, but it ended up that way. I awakened at 5:02 AM. I didn’t want to be late to go fishing with Ian Davis on his boat. We were to meet at 7:15 AM so I knew I couldn’t sleep in as I usually do. But, I got back into bed and just lay there. I got up again at 5:58 AM, and went back to bed again, waiting for 6:15 AM. At 6:14 AM I got up for good, made coffee and got ready for my morning adventure. Bag packed with life preserver, raingear, hat, sunscreen and sunglasses I drove to Tyler’s dock. Ian was already motoring in Mare Nostrum. We hailed one another.
He was in a different boat than the one I remembered. This one, maybe 20 foot with an inboard engine. He has had it for 6 years he said; keeping it at the Lion’s Head Harbour because the water level on the Huron Lake side of the Bruce Peninsula has been so low he couldn’t get into his man made cove in front of his cottage.
As he came close to the dock, I handed him my bag and coffee cup and then I tumbled into the stern, there are no steps to transition from its high freeboard to the floor, let alone from the dock to the hull. Plop. I was in.
The day had been overcast, but inside Little Pike Bay there was little wave action. As we motored out past the South Point alongside the shoal, the wind struck us at the bow. The seas that had been building from yesterday were riding towards us, lots of whitecaps. In a boat that size, small weight variances have a big influence, impacting the center of gravity, and, in this case, how far astern the pivot point is. The boat looks a lot like a very short version of the 35 foot Cape Hatteras “Picnic Boat” made several generations ago with a high prow to take on the Atlantic Ocean when Island hopping. In this look alike but diminutive boat, the high prow and heavy inboard engine in the stern results in two nasty situations when the wind is strong off the quarter beam; the wind catches the forward portion of the boat and tries to drive you sideways and then around, forcing the boat to run before the seas; and two, with an already heavy stern, made worse when anybody goes into the stern, the bow rides high and does not cut through the waves. Predictably, the boat hobby-horses in seas. You are pounding and slapping the water constantly. Bang bang bang. “How are your teeth?” Ian asks me. “Still got your fillings?” He said he didn’t understand why the boat was pounding so, “it’s a deep V hull and shouldn’t do this.” I didn’t point out what was obvious to me as I hung onto two built-in handles, eschewing my coffee mug as his portable GPS went flying off of its built-in mount and onto the floor. To make progress in these conditions and this boat in particular, it had to have enough speed to overcome the force of the wind and waves, so out we went banging our way to open water.
After a couple of miles of staccato conversation, in between banging episodes, we slowed down and headed directly into the South by Southwest seas. “Head South” he said turning over the helm to me as he went aft to set out the lines and attach the downriggers so that we could troll for salmon close to the bottom, about 65 feet. He had cut the inboard engine and started the trolling outboard engine and left me facing 6 ½ foot waves at 1.5 miles per hour. The compass course was supposed to be 180 degrees. The outboard is offset on a port bracket and was underpowered to drive us into the wind and seas to maintain course. So, we were all over the map, East, West and at one point North. The bow would rise high and then slap onto the next wave, at times pitching the boat one way or the other. Water sprayed over and around us. Ian was making progress in getting the lines out and the downriggers down. The stern was not pitching as much as the bow and the helm where I was sitting. “One hand for the boat and one hand for yourself.” A sailor’s adage. So true. To increase speed, I gave more gas to the outboard, but no response. “There must be something wrong
Back at the dock, I clambered out and said my thank you's and good-byes, we will try to go fishing again some other day. It had started to drizzle, the beginning of our rainy day.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
The promise of summer
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Sunday at the Cottage
Thursday, June 4, 2009
More tidbits from our trip
Monday, June 1, 2009
Thumbnail sketch of China and Hong Kong
"Welcome to the People's Republic of China. We are from the Government and we are here to help you. Before exiting the airplane everyone will under go a health inspection." 6 decades ago, "showers anyone?"
Notice there is no sidewalk. Pedestrians co-mingle with traffic. See the pretty decorative traffic signal ignored by one and all? See Rich run. See Kathy run. We made it across the street. Life is really random isn't it?
Let's see now; I do this on myself. This part goes over that part; no, that end goes over this end. See Andre, it is really simple to tie a half Windsor.
All of this inexpensive care is available of course because? costs are low. Just look at the the Staff Parking lot. No, I am not kidding. This is the price for China's Universal Health Care. The gentleman is ZiPing, Sherry's dad. His father at one time was a dignitary in the "Exclusive Medical Care" hospital while his mother is in the 6 bed regular full view Chinese people's unit.
The picture is taken from the window of the Magnetic Elevated Bullet Train of Shanghai's suburbs 30 miles out. We are traveling 430 KPH, about 265 mph.
This is Johnston Street in Hong Kong. Double decker tolleys and double decker buses. The streets are orderly, traffic flows according to the directions intended and signed, only they drive on the wrong side of the street. A legacy of the British, both the orderliness of the traffic flow but also of the side of the road traveled. No one is perfect.
A boutique shop in the Time's Square district and shopping center. Very high end (read no bargains) stores with prices to match.
Entrance to a Taoist Temple. Not surprising, no prohibitions on cigarette smoking. The coils inside the front door are incense, 30 day messages to one's ancestors. How about that, honoring your elders, never heard of such a thing.
Just plain home on the sea. Not the government issue, 100 stories high-rise clustered together like pencils in a cup holder, 600 sq feet, open, no partitions, toilet and shower reminiscent of the one in "Rudy", counter top stove, you provide your own refrigerator. 35% of Hong Kong people live like this. Of course, in honoring your elders, mom and dad live with you, all in bunk bed style; 5 to 6 persons to a suite. No clothes dryer, you hang you clothes out to dry in the 100% humidity. Everybody is doing it. No wonder some people choose to live on a junk.
Hong Kong has a night laser light show: 8:00 PM to 8:13 PM, 43 buildings. One goes to Kowloon, Mainland China to look at the island of Hong Kong lit up.
If you were wondering where people without cars, who rely on public transportation, and where refrigeration and storage are limited, shop for their food as there are no grocery stores or such around each cluster of pencil holder high-rises, there are local cluster day and night markets. People buy just enough groceries for each day/night. No refrigeration? No problem. You cook and eat what you got from the market that morning or night. Here hangs all sorts of choice cuts: liver, heart, pancreas, stomach, esophagus, testicles, ears, legs, hoofs, intestine, pork bellies, etc. Some pig or chicken or duck or goose heads, some brains, eyeballs, you name it, it's yours.
For freshness, just come to the jumping fish market, for live fish, shrimp, lobster, clams, oysters, shell fish etc all jumping on, and sometimes off the table, no worries, pick them off the ground and put them onto the table again. You want a dozen?
Do you know what kind of beans you want to buy? Nuts? Roasted whatever? Shopping is for the determined.
Now this is my kind of place. I can identify what smoked fowl I am getting, duck, goose, chicken, pigeon (large and small), and then there are some game birds, tiny ones whose whole roasted body fits on a swizzle stick: one bite and then pick your teeth with the stick's pointed end.
Flowers, orchids, and fragrant? up close? oh boy: The Kowloon New Territories flower market. You really can't smell the flower fragrance from a little bit away since there are competing odors of fish, fowl, and the butchered four legged meat markets just next door.
Further out in the New Territories, that portion of the Greater Hong Kong attached to the main land, hence, really The People's Republic of China, there is a secular holiday celebrating a poet who threw himself into the piranha fish infested waters in protest of corrupt government. Today, there are Dragon Boat races, all through the Special Administration Region of Hong Kong. This one in Tai Po, a 45 minute bus ride from Hong Kong Island. The once sleepy fishing village has given way to the industrial might of China. Alas, the waters are polluted and no more oysters or pearls can be found. The races go on though.
I am dipping my toe in the South China Sea off the island of Lamma, a trip recommended by Bec, and much appreciated. The island hosts coal fired power plants that supply all of Hong Kong's electrical power. 2 liters of beer in the noon day sun later, politics and government intrusion into one's life; ie, presumption of guilt instead of innocents, I could go on and on of course but won't since it does not seem to be as important as those issues seemed just a little while ago. The people are very nice. They are not angry with one another when they speak in an animated fashion, its just that Chinese language is a tonal language: Mandarin has 4 tones and Cantonese (Hong Kong and there is only a 10% overlap with Mandarin) has 6 tones. Mainland China is rapidly emerging from a 50 year civil war and 50 years of ruralification (backward looking) under Chairman Mao into the 21st Century; its just that the people have not come that far nor as rapidly and can be a bit rough around the edges. Its like in this country bringing an isolated Appalachian Mountain person into a big city and expecting etiquette and appreciation of fine Vietnamese French cuisine. Ain't going to happen over night. Hong Kong on the other hand, is a very crowded modern 21st Century city, energetic, and industrious. Fun to be in, for a while. Hectic to live there on a long term basis. Glad to be wandering home.


