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Long Weekend

For those readers outside of Canada, this is Thanksgiving Weekend for us. It happens on the second Monday in October each year. Thanksgiving is a harvest celebration, to give thanks at the end of harvest season. We celebrate each year with Tuffy P’s side of the family.

This year, the family is gathering a Tuffy’s dad’s cottage in the Kawartha Lakes on Sunday. I’ve been elected to cook a turkey dinner for the omnivores. Sheila is preparing a huge pot of vegan chili for the vegans and vegetarians in the crowd. I picked up my turkey this morning from my local organic butcher. Well, I don’t think he’s so organic, but his meat is. He takes orders for free-range birds and does quite a good business.

Hopefully tomorrow’s weather will be another nice crisp, sunny autumn day. I think I’ll bring a button accordion up and do some playing while the turkey cooks. Memphis will have a great time up there, splashing in the water, and showing off for the family.

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Around the World by Button Accordion: Part 2

Uraguay. I don’t know very much about Uruguay, its history, it’s cultural traditions. A couple years ago I stumbled across a CD by a group doing traditional music from Uruguay, featuring double-row button accordion. They were called Los Gauchos de Roldán. Naturally, I ordered it up right away.

Los_Gauchos_de_Roldan_w From their website: “Los Gauchos de Roldán” were formed in Tacuarembó, Uruguay in 1986 by accordion master Walter Roldán. Together they perform authentic music and dance from the rural areas of Uruguay. The origins are rhythms and melodies
brought by European immigrants that were adapted by Uruguayans, giving them a distinct tone and color. There are influences, as well, from Afro-Uruguayans. The traditional instruments are the two-row button accordion and the guitar. Walter comes from a family of traditional
musicians and learned to play the button accordion from his father and grandmother. Their vast repertoire includes traditional Uruguayan styles such as: polca, vals, shotis, mazurka, habanera, tango, milonga, chamarrita, as well as chamamé from Argentina, and vanera, maxixa, and vanerao from Southern Brazil.

I was delighted when I heard their music. Who knew they played polkas down in Uraguay? Not me. I know now though. I love this stuff. Listen to La Polca de Cerro Chato. They have great traditional outfits too, don’t they? Here’s Walter Roldán with Jose Curbelo y su Conjunto, playing a Milonga called Pampeana. Milongas preceeded Tangos historically and were developed in Argentina and Uruguay.

For me, this old traditional music, played just so, the way it has always been played, sounds so fresh and alive. What a revolution the polka must have been, when it spread across Europe, into Texas and Mexico, through the midwest industrial States, down into South America and who knows where else.

If there are any readers out there who know about the traditional music of Uruguay, please feel free to make a comment and share your experience and your stories.

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What were they thinking?

The Auditor General has reported on the Ontario government’s efforts to introduce an electronic health records system and it is grim news indeed for the Liberal Government. You can read the details in this article or many others available on the net. Suffice it to say that the whole sordid affair was a waste of taxpayers money of epic proportions.  Auditor General Jim McCarter said, “There were so many consultants, you had consultants basically approving other consultants being hired, often from their own firms”. Wow.

The Health Minister, David Caplan, has resigned, but much of the heat is going to fall on the former Health Minister, George Smitherman. Mr. Smitherman’s name has been tossed about as a possible candidate in next years Toronto Mayoralty race, but I expect this scandel could damage his chances. Yesterday I heard another potential candidate for the Mayor’s job, John Tory, say on his Newstalk 1010 radio show, that he asked tough questions of Premier McGuinty about the eHealth effort back when Tory was Leader of the Opposition.  Tory complained yesterday that his questions were redirected to Mr. Smitherman, who apparently pooh-poohed them as  top-line rhetoric. Mr. Tory, who has become the “drive-home” host at the radio station, has a handy platform at his fingertips these days for making political hay.

The whole business is an ugly mess.

What were these people thinking?

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I almost forgot – A Quiz

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Memphis and her feline pal Jacques are featured in this photo, but that’s the easy part. Here’s the pop culture quiz for today. What program is on television in the photo, who is the actor, and what was the name of his character? No prizes for this folks, just the glory of being the first to get it.

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Dazed

I’ve been a little dazed today. Memphis (our Landseer Newfoundland pup, for those who haven’t met her yet), has been experiencing some digestive problems. We’re not sure what the issue is. Parasites have been ruled out. It could be a food allergy. In any case, last night, her symptoms were frequent. Every hour or so, she would Woof. Tuffy P would wake up first (she hears everything) followed by me, and one or the other of us would go downstairs and let Memphis out to evacuate. I finally stopped falling back asleep. Tuffy stayed home with her today and her belly has settled some.We have some special food for her and a natural supplement that is supposed to help. She isn’t totally impressed by the dinner selection, but she’s eating it and as I say, she’s settling down.

By the way, Memphis weighed in today at 83 lbs.

I’m going for a nap. Catch you later.

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End of Uncertainty?

The following quote caught my eye. It’s from CanWest CEO Leonard Asper, commenting on media giant CanWest entering bankruptcy. I suppose some people are just cup half-full type people who can see the good side of anything.

This is a difficult day in some ways. In others, it’s a good day. It’s the end of the uncertainty. We have a renewed financial outlook for this company with the elimination of a large chunk of our debt

All of this affects the National Post, one of our two national rags, Global Television, MovieTime, Deja View, and Fox Sports World. The company is going to try to restructure over the next few months.

The Toronto Star also quotes Carleton University journalism school director Christopher Waddell. There are a lot of arguments for why that would be a good thing for the media … for competition and everyone else. He is suggesting that broken media empires could lead to a return to locally owned newspapers. I think that would be healthy, but I suspect it’s unlikely. It is so easy to gather a range of news online these days, I can’t see a positive future for the newspaper business.

On the broadcasting end of things, there is the problem of confidence. The Globe suggests that Global may not have enough tv shows in the bag to meet Canadian content regulations.  Producers are apparently reluctant to work for the troubled network without payment up front. I can understand that. We’ve been reading that CanWest has been in trouble for some time.


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Around the world by button accordion (part 1)

I’m not sure where this post is going exactly. Let’s take a little trip…. Why don’t we start in Louisiana and listen to the Savoy Family Band play the Bosco Stomp. Bosco is a small community north of Scott, Louisiana, named for one Bosco Prejean who set up a store there. The Savoy Family Band is led by accordionist and accordion maker Mark Savoy, who also runs the Savoy Music Center in Eunice Louisiana.

tigres-del-norte2Drive west into Texas. Maybe Los Texmaniacs are playing in San Antonio? Here are the boys doing some rock n roll. From Conjunto to Norteño , let’s go down to Mexico. Here’s Los Tigres del Norte playing El Hijo Del Pueblo. From Mexico, let’s fly over to Europe. There’s a strong button accordion tradition in parts of the Iberian Peninsula.

In Portugal, they call the triple row diatonic accordion a concertina. One of the dance forms they play over there is called a Vira, which is like a fast waltz. Here’s a nice one. Next time, Around the World by Button Accordion will start off again in Portugal. Where we’ll end up is anybody’s guess.


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Gates

Memphis in the Enchanted Mushroom Forest

Memphis in the Enchanted Mushroom Forest

You may have noticed that our little puppy Memphis has grown a bit. At just over 80 lbs, she isn’t done yet, but she’s already bigger than most of her playmates.

Before we brought Memphis home, we made some changes to accommodate her. We turned the living room into a library/office space would double as Memphis’ room. She has her kennel in there, and another dog bed in the corner, and a pile of dog toys. We installed dog gates (with little cat doors for the gang) at each of the entrances, and the idea was that when were were away, Memphis would stay in her room. This was fine for some time.

At a certain point, though, Memphis realized that the gates were hardly more than symbolic. She could get over them with little effort, and she did. This led to puppy mischief as you might imagine. She loves nothing more, for instance, than stealing a roll of toilet paper from the bathroom, and chewing it to 5,000 pieces. A few days ago, she redesigned a doormat for us. Short of turning the place into Fort Knox, I think we have to accept that Memphis is going to roam more of the house while we’re away, and puppy proof a few areas, to minimize the devilishly destructive fun a big overgrown goof of a pup can get into.

The gates also form a dinner time separation between Memphis and her food and our pride of house-lions and theirs. Long ago, they achieved détente, but once the cats have stepped away, any left-overs in the bowls form a huge temptation for Memphis. We either keep Memphis outside or in her room when the cat bowls are down.

There is one more consideration with the newfound freedom Memphis is attempting to claim and that is that the cats need to have a safe-area, a Memphis-free zone. They like to hang out with her much of the time, but occasionally she wants to play and they don’t. I’m going to install a cat-door on the door to the family room, the one above the garage. That way, we can close that door, and the cats can still get through and have that room for themselves when we’re at work.

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Gran Torino (on DVD)

This film didn’t seem nearly interesting enough to go see on the big screen, but it turned out to be better than I expected when we finally watched it at home on DVD.  I kind of expected a kind of Charles Bronson vigilante-type flick, but Gran Torino has some humour and even a tender moment or two. On the Anchovy 5 fish rating scale, I give this one 3 salties.

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Camps

Stinkhorn: egg stage

Stinkhorn: egg stage

There are two basic types of mushrooms hunters – those who collect mushrooms for dinner and those who collect for pure study. It kind of reminds me of fly fishing, where there are catch and release fly fishermen and there are bank-napping bait plonkers. As with the fly fishing example, there are of course many mushroom hounds who fall somewhere in between. Still, we’re talking about significantly different approaches.

Mushroom hounds who collect for food tend to target species. If they have a choice of several forests to forage in, they know one is likely to have some chanterelles, for instance, that’s the clear choice of destination. Or, they may target certain types of forest habitat that will likely contain the goodies they seek. Mushroom hunters who collect for study seem happy in any forest in which they can find a wide variety of species to collect and identify. Although I’m very interested in learning about as many species as possible, let there be no doubt that I collect mushrooms for food. Perhaps that is because I’m a novice. After all, for years I killed fish for food whenever I went fishing. It has only been in the past two decades that I almost totally stopped killing fish. I became much more interested in figuring out what bugs trout were eating, and at what stage of their lifecycle, and imitating that bug, presenting it to the trout as naturally as possible.

Through this summer, I have foraged in a number of forests, introduced to me by my brother Salvelinas Fontinalis, and I’ve begun to develop what I’ll call spots. I know a specific part of a certain forest where I’m likely to find hedgehog mushrooms. I know another spot for chanterelles and still another for lobsters. Sometimes, I’ll stop at the hedgehog spot on the way to other forests. It’s only a few minutes out of my way, and if conditions are right, there will be half a dozen nice hedgehogs waiting for me.

The pure study guys can find joy in anything they find. This might include tiny slime moulds or a resupinate that looks suspiciously like a swatch of paint on an old stick (likely one I broke getting at a hard to reach chanterelle). I have a lot of respect for the naturalists in the crowd. I wish I could better identify birds and trees and woodland flowers, tell the difference between a wasp and a hornet, find and name a dozen butterflies and so on. I’m working on learning a lot more about the natural world around me.

I can’t help but notice that most of the edibles I have been collecting are quite unique. It’s hard to mistake a chanterelle for anything else. Same with a hedgehog, which has teeth instead of gills or pores. Once you’ve seen a lobster mushroom, you won’t mistake it for anything else. Hunter’s Hearts, which I wrote about the other day, are equally distinctive. This hasn’t been a great summer for boletes, so I’ve only learned to identify a few of them. I’ve ignored most of the mushrooms that a casual observer might call “normal-looking mushrooms”. I did eat one agaricus, likely a meadow mushroom this summer, harvested from my neighbour’s lawn, but not until I did a spore print to be as sure as possible about what I was eating.