A letter published in yesterday’s Globe and Mail, Canada’s national paper of record: The Irving family doesn’t own the only exclusive fishing lodge in Canada. Someone should check with Red Green to determine how many freeloading ministers of the crown had free accomodations at Possum Lodge. Those found guilty should be duct-taped to a chair and forced to spend 24 hours in a small room with Stinky Peterson. Anyone who thinks Canada doesn’t have a unique culture should try to explain those three sentences to an Austrian.
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Srecko Kosovel 1904-1926 Picture from Carantha Poets you’ve never heard of: Srecko Kosovel. Sre�ko Kosovel is the Slovenian Rimbaud, the strongest and the strangest poetical energy of the Slovenian people, a visionary and a contemporary to every reader in every time. Born in 1904, he died in 1926 at the age of 22, but his work is strong, deep and finished as if he had written and lived for a long, long time. Each nation has a “miracle” in its literary history: Kosovel is definitely the most interesting Slovenian poetical icon. Here is An Autumn Landscape by Srecko Kosovel from …
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Okay, I think I’m ready to take this public. I am a map freak. I love maps, historic, hand drawn, topographic, demographic…whatever. As long as it has not been produced by MapQuest, I’m a fan. So I thought I would do something with this passion, and cleave off a little piece of cyberspace for occaisional indulgences in maps. I have therefore created a new blog, and I invite you to visit Maps and Territories. Maps and Territories links maps and stories together. It’s an occaisional curio, so don’t expect it to change every day. Once or twice a week will …
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A prehistoric clam garden This weekend’s Vancouver Sun had an article from one of my favourite journalists, Stephen Hume, about a remarkable prehistoric discovery here on the west coast. All up and down the coast of British Columbia where I live are little beaches tucked in small inlets, that feature a line of rocks that define the low water mark. It’s a curious thing, as biologist John Harper discovered. Were these beaches caused by natural forces or did human beings have a hand in them. Surprisingly, it was very hard to tell: They didn’t seem to work as fish traps …
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From Jack Ricchiuto’s Open Wiki comes notes on a talk by Ed Brown: “Curiosity and wonder allow us to meet things as they are — they make us more receptive. The opposite of interest is trying to decide what something is about so we can fix it. “