Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Time flies when you're having fun ...

We have been pretty active since our last post. Tonight we arrived in Vienna. This is a quick recap of what we have been up to since Thursday ...

Friday: We spent the day on a driving tour through some of the Alps outside of Interlaken. Our objective was to travel through both the Grimsel and Susten Passes. Both, unfortunately, we're still closed (they are typically closed all winter). The day was beautiful - sunny and a cloudless blue sky, so we decide to head to Susten Pass and see how far we could get. It was spectacular - we got within a few kilometres from the top. While there was still a fair amount of snow at that elevation (~2,250 metres), we were stopped by debris remaining from winter avalanches. Crews were working to remove the debris, which included entire large trees (roots and all). It was amazing! We returned down the valley and had an excellent lunch on a beautiful Gasthaus terrace, with the green, peaceful valley laid out before us with snow-capped mountains as the backdrop. We continued exploring on our way back to Interlaken. It was an incredible day.

Saturday: It was overcast first thing, with clouds hugging the mountains in the valley. Our plan was to drive to Stechelberg (elevation 900 metres), which is the end of the road up a glacial valley from Interlaken. From there, take the tram to Grimmelwald, a pedestrian- only town @ 1,400 metres and then hike up to Murren (1,654 metres). We started the drive up in pouring rain, not knowing if we'd attempt our plan. The valley is beautiful - it is very narrow and winding, with very steep and high mountain walls on both sides. There are ~80+ waterfalls in the valley - some plunging more than 500 metres down the mountain. To use these words yet again, it was amazing and beautiful. We stopped and briefly wandered in Lauterbrunnen. The rain finally stopped, and we watched the clouds start to break and the sun begin to peak through the clouds. Our trek was going to happen after all. Again, few words can describe the trip. Everywhere we looked was beauty - every view was spectacular. Murren is a winter and summer resort town on the side of the mountain (again, pedestrian only), with many hotels and guesthouses. But May is the "off season", so most were closed and the town was virtually empty. So it was very peaceful. We enjoyed the peace and solitude. We picked up some bread, meat and cheese at a small grocers and enjoyed lunch on a bench along the mountain path overlooking the valley.

Sunday: Today we departed Interlaken. There is so much more in this area that we would like to see and do, so we will definitely return. We finished off our stay with a wonderful dinner at our hotel last night. The Royal St. George is definitely a hotel we would choose again. It was overcast again this morning, and the rain started shortly after leaving enroute to Salzburg. It poured virtually the entire trip, and the clouds were low and blanketed all the valleys we travelled, so there was no opportunity to view any scenery. But at least it was a driving day where we encountered rain. A very interesting thing - trucks are banned from driving on highways in Austria on Sundays from midnight until 10:00 pm - so driving in the rain was much easier (and likely safer). What a great concept - one we should adopt in Canada. But we all know when that will happen - and that will be a very, very, very cold day!

Pics to follow ... And will try to catch up with our visit in Salzburg tomorrow.

Prost!


Friday, May 4, 2012

Switzerland is amazing!!!!!

We left Amsterdam on Wednesday morning (far to early, frankly, seeing as we're on holiday, but the price was right). We left the hotel at 6:00 am and walked to Central Station for the train to Schipol Airport - we had an 8:45 am flight to Geneva on Easyjet. Easyjet is definitely a no-frills airline, but their deals are great, they pretty much fly on time, and both our bags arrived!

We picked up our car (a VW "Polo" diesel) - it drives great, but it is really quite tiny. This has it's advantages, however, given some of the very narrow roads we've ventured down so far. Wednesday was a miserable weather day - dull & gray in Amsterdam, and dull & gray & rainy in Geneva. From Geneva, we headed to Interlaken - we are here until May 6th. We have a very nice room at the Royal St. Georges hotel - right on the 'main drag'. This is a great old hotel with lots of great character. We lucked out with a corner room on the '2nd' floor (which is really the 3rd!) with two small balconies overlooking the main drag with a view towards the Jungfrau.

Thursday morning dawned bright and sunny. We headed out in the Jungfraubahn train system towards Jungfraujoch - the highest altitude rail station in Europe. We took three trains to reach the top. Two were narrow gauge cog railways - it is unbelievable the incline angles they take, and they were an amazing experience. The scenery was absolutely spectacular ( I'll continue trying to post some pictures, but have to say I'm having some issues uploading via my IPad - basically, I just can't do it yet!). The highest altitude we reached was just over 11,300 feet above sea-level. Thankfully, we didn't encounter any altitude sickness, though breathing could be a bit difficult with anything strenuous - guess it takes a few days to acclimatize. It was a spectacular and very full day - we returned to Interlaken around 7:00 pm - quite exhausted

Today's forecast was for mixed sun and cloud, with chance of thunderstorms. Again, it dawned bright and clear. We'll post more on today later, as our online time is almost up, but it was another great day. We travelled a funicular to a great viewing site above Interlaken ( which I should have explained above is a town between two lakes), and spent a good part of the day driving through mountain passes and valleys. Absolutely breath-taking.

Until tomorrow ...


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Queen's Day ... has come, but not completely gone.

Wow.

Queen's Day was unbelievable. Impressions run the full length of the spectrum. It was a beautiful day weatherwise - sunny, the clearest blue sky and about 22 degrees. We started wandering the canals around 10:00 am.

They warn people not to drive in Amsterdam on Queen's Day, and that is for good reason. Streets become virtually impassable by noon unless you are walking - and at times that becomes impossible too. And most of the transit in the City Centre ceases as well - there are just too many people. It didn't matter where you looked - there was a sea of orange-clad people - down the smallest of alleys, and packed in boats along the canals. Every bridge was lined with people, and most of the Old City Squares had stages and live music. It is legal to drink in the streets on Queen's Day, and Heineken and Amstel were flowing freely.

In addition, Amsterdam turns into a massive city-wide flea market / garage sale on Queen's Day. It is a chance for everyone to sell anything and everything. Some youngsters got quite enterprising, selling baked goods, lemonade, fresh fruit and some even with coolers of water and Heineken on ice. The beer from these young entrepreneurs was much more affordable than from the bars (that charged everybody a 1 euro "refundable deposit" on disposable plastic cups - nice scam!). Some people loaded up on cases of Prosecco (sp?) and were selling this with fresh strawberries and orange juice. Quite refined!

So the day was amazing - we walked miles and miles and had a great time. Finally, around 6:00 pm, the streets started to clear a bit. We stopped at a tapas restaurant (Tapas L'Amour) and had probably the worst meal we've ever had - it was so bad, that we posted a review on Trip Advisor last night. From there, we headed back to a Belgian Beer pub we had noticed on Saturday. We finished off the day there with a couple wonderful Belgian ales. After such a wild day, the city was shutting down by 10:00. On our walk back to the hotel, we travelled streets that were crammed with people only a few hours earlier, but all that was visible now was garbage. In the course of 12 hours, Amsterdam had become, by far, the most filthy city we have ever walked through. Overnight, some streets did get cleaned up, but tonight, there are still heaps of garbage in many areas of the city. A large part of the reason for this is the almost total lack of trash receptacles throughout the city - pretty poor planning, given they have done this before and know that millions (literally!) of people descend on the city.

But it was, all in all, an incredible day - a completely unique experience. Pics to follow soon.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

There's nothing more Dutch than tulips ...

Just a short update tonight - it has been a long and eventful day.

Today we spent most of the day at Keukenhof, a park outside of Lissebroek. Keukenhof is a 38 hectare park full of tulip gardens. We have had mostly grey, overcast weather since arriving, but were lucky today to get some beautiful sunny breaks while at the park. Keukenhof is spectacular - they say there are over 4.5 million bulbs planted. It seems like there must be more. No description we could provide here would do it justice, so we will add some pictures to this post when we are able. And do we have pictures.




Tonight, we spent some time after dinner wandering a few different neighborhoods in the Old City. The street parties have begun. There are masses of people all over the city. There are bands in city squares and in front of bars - it is really something to experience. There are narrow city streets that are jammed with people and virtually impossible to navigate. Don't really know what else to say about it tonight - it is actually quite overwhelming. But people are great - friendly and welcoming ... more on all of this later. Good night.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Arrived Safely in Amsterdam

We arrived safely in Amsterdam today. It was an uneventful journey, which is always a good thing. We flew over on a Boeing 777-300 with KLM. What a huge plane. It boggles the mind that something that big and that heavy, with that may people on board can actually lift off the ground. The plane has 63 rows, and apart from Business Class and a few rows at the back of the plane, there are 10 seats across. That's a lot of people.

We landed in Amsterdam almost a half hour early - at 6:30 am. The sun was just coming up and we flew over some amazing tulip fields on our descent into Amsterdam ... beautiful. We had a fabulous dinner tonight at a small little restaurant called "Humphrey's" ... it was very good. We then walked a few miles after dinner, and are now settled back at the hotel. It will be an early evening to catch up on some rest before the rest of the weekend. You can already feel the party-vibe on the streets with all the extra 'imports' into the city for Queen's Day on Monday.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

We're off across 'The Pond'

Well, it is here ... Tonight we head out. It has been a busy week getting things ready and wrapped up, but I think we are set. We are, at the very least, more than ready for a holiday, so it will be a good break.
We'll post an update when we arrive in Amsterdam on Friday!

Proost!


Thursday, April 19, 2012

7 more sleeps ...

This time next week, we will be in Toronto preparing to head to the airport.   On Thursday night, we leave for Amsterdam.  We are spending several days in Amsterdam, and then we are moving on to a driving holiday in Switzerland and Austria.  From Geneva, we are heading to Interlaken for a few days.  From there, we will head to Salzburg and then Vienna, which will be our furthest point east.  After Vienna, we start our journey back west, stopping in Innsbruck and then finally to Montreux on Lake Geneva.  We have several days in each location, so we will have time to explore.

In Amsterdam, we are staying at Hotel Estherea (http://www.estherea.nl/).  We stayed here a few years ago when we were in Amsterdam, and really enjoyed the hotel.  It is a small-ish family-run hotel in the old city centre.  It is a collection of five 17th century canal row houses that have been "merged" into the hotel.   The staff was great, and made us feel very welcome.  It is a good spot to spend a few days to settle in after our trans-Atlantic flight.

Hotel Estherea at night

Hotel Estherea at dusk

Our 'room with a view' (last visit)


We are in Amsterdam for "Queen's Day", or “Koninginnedag”  - a National holiday that celebrates the Dutch Monarch.   Queen's Day was first celebrated in 1885 on August 31st after the birth of Queen Wilhelmina in 1880.  Beginning in 1948, after Queen Juliana's ascension to the throne, Queen's Day has been officially celebrated on her birthday - April 30th.   Queen Beatrix, after succeeding her mother in 1980, continues to call April 30th Queen's Day in commemoration of her mother.

Queen's Day has been called one of the world's largest street parties, and it is said that festivities in Amsterdam rival those of Mardi Gras in New Orleans and New Year's in in Time Square.  The city is bathed in orange as people hit the streets and canals dressed in the National colour.


Queen's Days Past ...






This is going to be fun !!!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Easter Weekend at Sleeping Giant

Sleeping Giant Provincial Park












Friday, March 16, 2012

Soon to be ... a Fine Day for a Guinness


Tomorrow will be a fine day for a Guiness!
The forecast is for sun and 22 degrees Celsius ... virtually unheard of for Thunder Bay in March.

For St. Patrick's Day dinner, we are making Lamb Stew and traditional Irish Brown Bread.

We hope you all enjoy a fine day ... Cheers!

Happy St. Patrick's Day!


Scenic Ireland, with background music from the Chieftains

Enjoy a wee bit more Celtic Music ...

The Chieftains and Van Morrison
Star of the County Down

The Chieftains and Alison Krauss
Molly Ban

The Corrs, The Chieftains and others ...

The Chieftains and Friends ...
The Dingle Set


St. Patrick's Day 2011 - Flash Mob at Sydney Station

Thursday, March 8, 2012

It Gets Better!

Dan Savage is an American syndicated columnist, best known for his column "Savage Love".  I stumbled across an article on a "project" that he and his partner started back in September 2010 in response to the growing number of gay teen suicides resulting from bullying in school - the "It Gets Better Project".   The whole thing got started when they posted a YouTube video.  The project has grown from there and the rest, as they say, is history.  Their message of hope for young people is important and bears repeating wherever and whenever possible.  As such, the following are excerpts from the "It Gets Better Project" website.


 An Excerpt from ... http://www.itgetsbetter.org/pages/about-it-gets-better-project/:

Growing up isn’t easy. Many young people face daily tormenting and bullying, leading them to feel like they have nowhere to turn. This is especially true for LGBT kids and teens, who often hide their sexuality for fear of bullying. Without other openly gay adults and mentors in their lives, they can't imagine what their future may hold. In many instances, gay and lesbian adolescents are taunted — even tortured — simply for being themselves.

 While many of these teens couldn’t see a positive future for themselves, we can. The It Gets Better Project was created to show young LGBT people the levels of happiness, potential, and positivity their lives will reach – if they can just get through their teen years. The It Gets Better Project wants to remind teenagers in the LGBT community that they are not alone — and it WILL get better.

What is the It Gets Better Project?
In September 2010, syndicated columnist and author Dan Savage created a YouTube video with his partner Terry Miller to inspire hope for young people facing harassment. In response to a number of students taking their own lives after being bullied in school, they wanted to create a personal way for supporters everywhere to tell LGBT youth that, yes, it does indeed get better.


More than a year later, the It Gets Better Project™ has turned into a worldwide movement, inspiring more than 30,000 user-created videos viewed more than 40 million times. To date, the project has received submissions from celebrities, organizations, activists, politicians and media personalities, including President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Adam Lambert, Anne Hathaway, Colin Farrell, Matthew Morrison of "Glee", Joe Jonas, Joel Madden, Ke$ha, Sarah Silverman, Tim Gunn, Ellen DeGeneres, Suze Orman, the staffs of The Gap, Google, Facebook, Pixar, the Broadway community, and many more. For us, every video changes a life. It doesn’t matter who makes it.

ItGetsBetter.org is a place where young people who are lesbian, gay, bi, or trans can see how love and happiness can be a reality in their future. It’s a place where our straight allies can visit and support their friends and family members. It’s a place where people can share their stories, take the It Gets Better Project pledge and watch videos of love and support.

On March 22, 2011, six months following the launch of the project, the It Gets Better Project book was released. The book , It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying, and Creating a Life Worth Living is on-sale wherever books are sold. It includes essays and new material from more than 100 contributors, including celebrities, religious leaders, politicians, parents, educators, youth just out of high school, and many more. For more details and to purchase the book, visit  http://itgetsbetter.org/book.


Terry Miller & Dan Savage

An Excerpt ... Dan Savage:

"I wish I could've told him that it gets better."  ...  

That was our reaction earlier this summer after hearing of the suicide of Justin Aaberg, a victim of anti-gay bullying in Minnesota.  And our reaction a few weeks ago when we read about the suicide of Billy Lucas, a victim of anti-gay bullying in Indiana.  Terry and I were both bullied in middle and high school.  As adults, we now know what too many young, isolated, bullied LGBT kids do not: it gets better.  Life gets better, and one day you find happiness. 

But homophobic school administrators, parents, and preachers would never invite us, or any LGBT adults, to speak to gay kids who are being bullied.  And then it occurred to us:  we didn't need an invitation.  We could record a video and speak directly to LGBT kids about surviving bullying and going on to lead rewarding lives filled with joy, family, and love.  We didn't need anyone's permission to tell them — it gets better.

We posted our YouTube video on September 21, 2010. By the next day we had received a dozen videos from LGBT adults sharing their stories of survival and success.  By the end of the week we had more than 200. Soon we were overwhelmed — and not just with videos from LGBT adults. Emails were pouring in from LGBT teenagers all over the country telling us that the videos were working.  Most heartbreakingly of all, the mothers and fathers of bullied LGBT kids were watching the videos with their children and submitting their own.  The "It Gets Better Project" had struck a chord. 

LGBT adults have long felt helpless as we watched LGBT youth be bullied in schools.  We knew that while bullied straight kids go home to sympathetic parents and a shoulder to cry on, bullied gay kids all too often go home to more bullying from their parents and their churches.  We despaired as we read about gay teens taking their own lives, and didn’t know how to reach out to these kids — fearing our motives would be questioned if we did.

All of that has changed with the IGBP.  This site is a place where LGBT adults can share the stories of their lives with LGBT youth.  It's a place where young people who are gay, lesbian, bi, or trans can see with their own eyes that love and happiness and reconciliation with their families are possibilities for them, too.  It's a place where our straight allies can add their names in solidarity and help spread our message of hope. We can reach out, we can deliver messages of hope, and we can make a difference.

The videos on this site do not solve the problem of anti-gay bullying.  We need to work on getting safe schools legislation passed in every state; we need to push for anti-bullying programs; we need to hold negligent school administrators accountable; and we need to confront the bigots and demagogues who inject hate into the national conversation about LGBT people and give straight children license to abuse and bully LGBT kids.  All of that will take years of dedicated activism.

In the meantime we can reach out, right now, to LGBT kids who are suffering and deliver messages of hope.  We can offer them practical advice about how to survive what are often the toughest years for LGBT people, and we can share our lives as LGBT adults with them.  We can be role models and we can be mentors.  Our goal is to create an archive of videos that speak to LGBT youth from all walks of life, from all faiths, and in every part of the country.
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JOIN THE MOVEMENT - TAKE THE PLEDGE:
Everyone deserves to be respected for who they are. I pledge to spread this message to my friends, family and neighbors. I'll speak up against hate and intolerance whenever I see it, at school and at work. I'll provide hope for lesbian, gay, bi, trans and other bullied teens by letting them know that "It Gets Better."

The brilliant man that is Rick Mercer!

Thanks Rick, for your always insightful expression of what should, in fact, be common sense to us all!

If by any chance you stumble on this, I think your "rants" are brilliant!  You are one of the few in Canadian Media who can intelligently express an opinion.  Maybe "Rick's Rant 101" should be required teaching in every Canadian High School, College and University.  And an annual refresher course for all federal MPs would be a good idea too!


     Rick's Rant - Robocalls

     Rick's Rant - On-line Privacy

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Thunder Bay ... a February day that feels like spring!


Looking out at Mink Mountain.



Looking out at the Sleeping Giant from the Thunder Bay Waterfront

Where have the last two years gone!

So after a two year hiatus (which is really pretty lame considering I never really got off to much of a start with this blog in the first place), I am determined to take another stab at it.  I'm not quite sure which direction this might go, so let's just see where it takes us (if anywhere) ...

We had a great time last weekend when the Kenora Clan came to town for Connor's hockey tournament.  It was a good visit, though as always, much too short.  

We were also able to make it to the Jann Arden Concert at the Community Auditorium on Friday night.  She is touring with an amazing band, and it was an excellent show.  It got me remembering previous show's I've been to with Jann ... the 1st was at the old Ontario Place Forum as part of an AIDS Benefit Concert (along with a host of other well known Canadian artists).  I next saw Jann at Massey Hall in a double-billing with Holly Cole.  Both of these were excellent performances also, and again, she does not disappoint on this tour.  

Thanks for including Thunder Bay on your tour schedule Jann.


Not sure where this will take us, but hope you come back on occassion for a visit.

Cheers ... and see you soon!