Life Off the Grid 30 –
July 13, 2012
7:15 AM
Can't believe I slept
so long.
It rained a lot last
night. Everything is wet. The sky is hazy grey and there is fog on
the lake. It's about 18C but humid. The forecast is for sunshine and
a high of 29C with a chance of a shower this evening. So hot.
It's my brother's
birthday and I am pondering driving out to Wilson's to give him a
call. Maybe see what the store there carries. Talk to them about
cell service and whether they have internet somehow. And on the way
back bring another load down from the truck. Slowly but surely I am
getting everything down here.
But first, dose the dog
and have breakfast. I don't imagine the store is open yet.
I keep hearing rave
reviews on the radio for “With Beasts of the Southern Wild”. Must
try to see it sometime, after I'm back in civilization.
Three horses killed in
the chuckwagon races at the Calgary Stampede. Why are they even
allowed to run chuckwagon races? An average of two horses are killed
every year. They said 53 horses over 26 years. They go into it
knowing horses will die. They should just discontinue that event. It
is the most dangerous event for horses in the whole stampede.
8:15 AM
Kettle's on. Going to
have couscous for breakfast. Dog has been medicated. His sore still
looks bad.
I'm going to have to
sweep the webs out of the windowsills in the cabin again. Those
spiders are so busy. There was one day a few years ago, Jeff was
sitting on the dock reading. I guess he was really into his book and
didn't move for a long time. Or perhaps he fell asleep. When I went
down to call him for supper, we found a spider had spun a web between
his pant leg and the chair leg.
The plan for today is
to eat breakfast, and do a bunch of cleaning in the cabin and start
my prawns marinading. Then it's up to the truck and a trip down the
road to Wilson's to check out the store (if it's open), see if I can
get cell signal and check messages, and call my brother to wish him a
happy birthday. Then back to the parking place and bring a load down
from the truck. Then I will finish sweeping the outside cabin walls.
And maybe find the stiff brush for taking loose paint off and do some
of that. I don't think I can start painting today. Everything is wet
right now and if it's going to rain again later...
Then this afternoon,
it's unit 2 in the Spanish course and some writing. After that, we'll
see.
8:30 AM
Oh my. I just opened
up one of the three toolboxes I bought at Princess Auto when I went
into Winnipeg from the Folk Festival. There's another, smaller
toolbox inside. And another, even smaller toolbox inside that one. I
am so surprised. I had no idea. I thought I was buying 3 toolboxes
and instead I have 9! I can feel my OCD twitching. We are going to
have extreme tool organization.
Or maybe... Maybe I
will use some of the really small ones to organize all the random
arts and crafts supplies that are stuffed into shelves. Getting
excited...
On The Current they are
speaking with Nazanine Afsheen Jam (sp?) , an Iranian-born human
rights activist who happens to be married to Peter McKay, Minister of
Defence. She is upset about an event held recently at Carlton
University honouring the late Ayatollah Khomeini. She is calling for
the closure of the Iranian Embassy to send a message to the
government of Iran that we do not endorse or tolerate their human
rights abuses. She accuses the embassy of trying to recruit Iranian
Canadians to monitor critics of the regime in Canada and suggests
that such critics in other countries have been assassinated. She went
on to say that she opposes military intervention. I wonder if the
PMO is right now telling Peter McKay to put his wife on a leash. Not
so much because she has said anything terribly counter to the
government policy, but because she is demonstrating her ability to
speak out about issues that concern her. And in the future, her
opinions may run counter to the government's will. Even her
assertion that military intervention in Iran was not the way to
go.... It is clear that our government is toying with the idea
already. Harper has been laying the groundwork with dire warnings
about what a threat Iran poses. Rumblings of a nuclear weapons
program... Public opinion gets shifted gradually. Then when it is
announced that we're going in, the general population already accepts
that there is good reason.
1:45 PM
Went out to Wilson's.
Didn't manage to get the pay phone to work to call Don, it couldn't
read my VISA card. I did go in to check out the store and had a long
chat with Edie. She is the daughter of Ed and Kay Wilson, the
original owners of the lodge. Ed died last year, and Kay is 82 and
deaf and living in Winnipeg. She hasn't been out to the camp for a
decade or more. Edie was at the camp last in 1996, and then, this
past November, when her older sister who was running the place had
had enough, she came out and took over. All four Wilson children were
born out in the bush, before the road ran up from Kenora and out to
Grassie Narrows. That would be why they are right by the railway.
That was the only way in and out.
Edie and her husband
have a place in Emo and I gather he is running things there and
coming out to visit now and then. So we have that in common, although
Emo is a lot closer than Springbank. We talked about the
difficulties in getting cell service (they have a radio phone at camp
that works well except when the power goes out during storms). We
talked about satellite internet (she would love to get internet. They
have a Bell satellite dish but it has never worked). We talked about
bears (she says this is the worst year anyone can remember for
problem bears. The ice was off the lakes weeks early and the bears
came out of their dens and have been turning up on people's porches,
looking in the windows of cabins in the area). She told me how to
bait the bears with fruit and cooking grease to lure them away from
the cabin if I was having problems.
And then she told me
the story of her brother's murder, 4 years ago, in Kenora. And she
was so articulate and the details of the story of the murder and the
police investigation and preliminary hearings were so fascinating
(albeit horrific) that I am thinking there is a documentary film
here. Or possibly a book. There is currently a publication ban until
after the trial, which is set for January, so I can't talk about it
here. But there is nothing to keep me from taking my camera over
there and interviewing her about it. Then back in Alberta I can do
the background research and access the court records and see what
comes of it. I asked her if she would tell her story on camera for a
possible future documentary film, and she said she would love to.
She also invited me around anytime. “If you get bored, or lonely,
or whatever, you know... Stop in for some tea and a visit.” I think
I will do that. Probably fairly often.
It was raining when I
left Wilson's but not here, not yet. Very cloudy though. And
unspeakably humid. And Seamus has just puked again. Neither dog has
really eaten anything much since we got back out here. Just too hot,
I think. But Seamus is bringing up foamy bile. No food in it at all.
He seems fine in all other respects. Just suddenly starts this
chugging sound, and this time I was quick enough to get him off the
furniture. Not so fortunate last night. Good thing the living room
furniture's trashed anyway.
I am thinking about
Edie's story. She is right. There seem to be a lot of details that
don't jive between the eye-witness testimonies and the accused
people's stories and what her own family knew about her brother. And
also, there are some quite disturbing aspects in the investigation
process. Her nephew, her brother's son, hasn't been out of the bush
since his father was murdered. He lives at the camp. Refuses to go
back to living in town. I'm unclear as to whether he was 14 at the
time of the murder, or he's 14 now. I think he must have been 14
then, which makes him 17 or 18 now. What a terrible thing for a
family to go through.
She said she's been
waiting for someone to come through that door to her store who could
tell the story, and I guess after we chatted awhile, she decided that
I was the one. We had talked about solar power and I explained the
system we have set up and how great it is to be able to power a
laptop, because I write out here... It wasn't long after that when
she asked if I knew about the murder.
The thermometer says
it's only 25 or 26C, but it is sticky humid and gross.
3:45 PM
Done my Spanish lesson
for today. I seem to be getting good scores. I hope I am learning
something.
4:30 PM
Yay! The boys are
eating. Guinness polished off a bowl of food and now Seamus is
eating. I worry when they aren't interested in food. Of course, it
is brutally hot. I don't have much appetite either. Well, Seamus ate
half a dish. Better than nothing. It feels like it's going to rain.
Oops. Not just feels
like. It is raining.
Wow, they are
interviewing a heavy-weight rower going to the Olympics in London.
He says he eats 9,000 calories a day. Breakfast is 5 eggs and bacon
and a whole bunch of other stuff. Crazy!
Oh boy. Lots of big
thunder now. Lots of rain too. I think the BBQ is off. Which is just
as well, since I didn't get around to marinading my prawns. I had
not taken them out of the freezer and they were too frozen to peel
the skins off. I will get the out of the freezer now and into the
fridge, and tomorrow morning they will be good to go.
Still leaves the
question of what dinner will be. I have tempeh. I have vegetables. I
have a wild rice and grains mix. Possibilities.
I am starting to get
into my writing. Made a bit of a start today. It's tough to pick up
after letting a work of fiction lie for awhile. Hard to get the
feeling back, get into the groove. Feel the characters again. It's
like those awkward few moments when you first see a friend you
haven't seen for a long time and you struggle to recapture what made
you such great friends before.
5:00 PM
And... I can't find my
wild rice mix. How can this be? Can we have eaten them all while Jeff
was out? That totally goes on my shopping list for next week. And I
guess my choice is down to regular white rice, mung beans or lentils
(red or green). Mung beans are fabulously good for you: only 15 mg of
sodium, 16 grams of fibre, 24 grams of protein... But. They have to
be soaked for 6 hours or overnight. Maybe soak some for tomorrow.
But, in the meanwhile... Lentils are also good: 20 mg of sodium, 9
grams of fibre and 15 grams of protein. That's it then. Red lentil
dahl. And veggies and a bit of tempeh.
Must go out and get
water. The buckets are empty. I hate going out on the dock when
there's lightening over the lake.
5:30 PM
Water retrieved without
incident. Threw some squeaky things and balls for the dogs. Mung
beans are soaking for tomorrow. Lentils are rinsed and in water,
waiting to come to a boil. They will simmer for half an hour. Added
some curry paste so they will have a nice Tandoori flavour.
Meanwhile, I shall
figure out which veggies I feel like having tonight. I am really
hungry. I guess I didn't have lunch. My body has long ago forgotten
the couscous from this morning.
On the radio just now I
heard the team driver of that chuckwagon team that fell and three
horses were killed at the Calgary Stampede. He was all teary. He'd
had one of the horses for 13 years. He was a member of the family.
He was his kids' horse. So what the bloody hell was he thinking
hooking up such a beloved animal to a chuckwagon and entering him
into the most dangerous horse sport in the stampede? Honestly. I'm
sorry, but I think anyone who values horses and still goes ahead and
enters them in a chuckwagon race has shit for brains. The event
should be banned. It's Russian Roulette for horses.
I am so glad I got the
hell out of Dodge before the Stampede started. I really couldn't
stand it up close. I got a text from Jeff while I was in at Wilson's
(there's some sort of occasional cell signal near there). He has
been wearing his cowboy boots to work all week (and no doubt the rest
of his cowboy gear) and his feet hurt. I'm like, you guys are
accountants, for god's sake! Why do you all have to dress like
Buffalo Bill for the Stampede? Calgary, I think, must be the only
city on the planet where full-grown straight men who do not own a
horse or even like riding them, walk around dressed like cowboys, and
they think it's normal. It's just bizarre. We're not talking about
teenagers who are forced to wear Halloween costumes for the last two
weeks of October for their shifts at the dollar store. No. These are
bankers, lawyers, CEOs of major corporations, accountants... All of
them with their shiny fringy shirts, and humungous belt buckles. And
the hats. OMG. It's bad enough outside of Stampede month, I can
hardly imagine what it's like in July. Calgary gives the expression
“all hat and no horse” new life.
The women aren't any
better. They either dress as cowgirls or barn-dancers. Layers of
crinoline under some big gingham skirt... I just can't get into it.
Which, I guess is a bit contrary. I like dressing up. I love
Halloween and getting to wear a costume. But western wear would
really not be my first or second or third or fifteenth choice. And if
everyone is dressing the same... what's the fun in that? It's some
mass psychosis that hits southern Alberta in July.
6:20 PM
I have cut up veggies.
The lentils have been
off the heat for a while now.
I cut up enough veggies
that I could set aside half of them to marinade for a BBQ tomorrow.
With the tempeh it will
be some awesome eats shortly.
If you are unfamiliar
with tempeh, it is a soybean thing. It usually comes in a flat,
square cake, and is often seasoned. The brand I am using is Green
Cuisine, and I have Indonesian flavour, which is nice and spicy. It
is sometimes available in the refrigerated health food section of the
grocery store, but is more readily found in health food stores. It
has lots of protein (14 grams, in this case) and a bit of fibre (3
grams). It also has a lot of sodium (50 mg), so I just use a little
bit, to add some extra flavour and texture to the stir-fried veggies.
I just cut some thin slices off the cake and then slice them in half.
So, standard stir-fry
process. Heat some oil (I use olive oil because it is healthier than
the traditional peanut oil, although avacado oil would be good too)
in a frying pan and add some minced garlic, ginger and chili peppers.
Then start with the
longest cooking (hardest usually) vegetable. Carrots, in this case.
Then the onions.
Then mushrooms.
Then celery.
Then kale. I added a
bit of water after the kale to keep stuff from sticking.
Then asparagus.
Then Broccoli. Because
although broccoli seems hard, it is actually quite delicate and is
much better crisp. I added a bit more water with the broccoli.
Then tempeh, because it
just needs to be heated through.
Oooh! Interesting!
Tony Clemente (gazebo guy) has just opened a visitor's centre in his
riding honouring Dr. Norman Bethune (i.e. Inventor of mobile blood
transfusions and a bunch of other medical stuff). Seems sleepy guy
Rob Anders (Conservative MP in Calgary West) has woken up and spoken
out about his objection to this. Bethune, you see, was very active
in Mao Tse Tung's China. Mostly doing doctorish stuff. But Anders
feels we should not be spending taxpayer dollars to commemorate
communist sympathizers. He was asked by the interviewer, and affirmed
that he had heard from the PMO about his opinion. He declined to
elaborate on the nature of these communications. Harper really has
his hands full lately dealing with all these pesky MPs speaking out
of turn and not toeing the party line.
7:30 PM
Voila! A fabulous
dinner. With an added dollop of organic yoghurt to cool off the
spices a wee bit.
7:36 PM
Mmmmm! That was tasty!
And again, it took 6
minutes to eat what took and hour and a half to make. But...there
are leftovers enough for another meal. Leftovers are good. Breakfast
tomorrow will be amazing.
Ok. I have mixed up a
marinade of Bragg (a sort of low-sodium soy sauce), olive oil, and
minced garlic, ginger and chili peppers. I poured it over the veggies
– the same veggies that were in dinner. I will let it marinade
overnight in the fridge and tomorrow night I will make a foil package
and put it on the BBQ. It will be very good indeed.
This is Bragg, in case
you are not familiar with it. Usually can't find it in grocery
stores. Organic stores and health food stores may carry it. Unlike
regular soy sauce, Bragg soy has only 160 mg of sodium per 2.5 ml.
Basically, it has the taste of soy without all the salt. And along
with being better for you, it tastes better to most people because
there is far less salt. And it doesn't give you that super-thirst a
lot of people get after eating Chinese food with regular soy sauce.
Some of that thirst is because most Chinese restaurants put MSG in
their food (very bad -avoid!) but even in a no-MSG restaurant the soy
is loaded with sodium. Which is salt. Which makes you thirsty. It's
also gluten free, gluten being an issue for some people. It's also
now available in a pump spray bottle, so you can spritz a salad or
noodles or rice with flavour without getting a puddle of soy sauce on
your plate.
Sorry, I guess I've
inadvertently done 2 product placements in this blog. I am not being
paid by either the makers of Bragg or the folks who make Tempeh. But
when you find something that is good, and healthier, it's nice to
share.
8:00 PM
The rain has stopped
but it's still cloudy. Last night I was unnerved by the thunder
storm. When I went up to bed I found a t-shirt Jeff had worn when he
was out here and forgot to take back. It smelled like him. I put it
on as a nightshirt and I felt so comforted and safe, being able to
inhale his scent. I guess I'm not as much of a badass as I like to
project. Anyway, it's calmer tonight, so I probably don't need au de
Jeffsweat to sleep. It was comfy though... We'll see how things are
when I go to bed.
Have to dose the dog.
8:45 PM
Feeling sleepy.
Guinness has had his pills. The dogs have food and water. I think I
am going to go to bed.
9:15 PM
I was just about to
head up to bed and a text from Jeff came through! And I responded
and it went through! I sent a few more texts that went through but
then the connection was lost. My theory is that a vehicle with a
signal booster came into range and then passed by. Gotta get a
signal booster!
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