Tag Archives: dogs

xmas in virginia

We did eventually see some snow in Virginia. It was out in the woods when we were tramping around and ran into a few West Virginia guys hunting a “burr,” which took some of us a few moments to interpret as ‘bear.’ They had dogs and walkie talkies and later we learned from people of the hunting persuasion that they were probably just doing it for sport. Once they tree the bear with the dogs they let it go again just to say they did it.

This was a couple of days after Xmas though. Maybe I should stay on topic.

We spent Xmas eve over with Holly’s mom’s family and Xmas day we went to her dad’s family. It was interesting hanging around in all these family dynamics that don’t really have much to do with me but that I’ve heard of over the years. (And before you make comments about me marrying into those families one day, you should probably know that Holly and I aren’t planning a future together any more. Which is to say we’ve broken up or parted ways or something else that means we aren’t a couple any longer. We still reciprocally think of each other as a fine person.) I got to talk to people and compare what I thought with what someone much closer to the situation has thought. All very neat. I got to give a library spiel often and listened to the ways other families interact. Holly’s Mom’s family reminded me more of my extended family on my dad’s side, and Holly’s Dad’s of my mom’s. But different. You know, the way people are different.

Of course we ate a lot.

I actually ate pretty terribly the whole time I was there, and have no one but myself to blame. There was a table filled with chocolate and sweets and pie and cookies and it was just there all the time. It was like Halloween for ten days and I couldn’t go find a damned vegetable. The veggies were there, behind the door of the fridge, but that door felt so daunting compared to slightly underdone peanut blossoms that were right there in my path.

We read a whole lot and did not go to Bootville on Holly’s 30th birthday, which would have been fun, because it was called Bootville. It was a rather low-key affair, punctuated by me reading The Graveyard Book aloud.

When we finally left Harrisonburg on the 30th I felt like I’d gotten a good feel for what small-town/rural life might be like. I don’t think of myself as an entirely urban person, since most of my life was spent in little old Winnipeg. But a place like Harrisonburg (especially a half-hour drive from town like where Holly’s parents live) is more different than I’d really thought about.

Then we went to Pennsylvannia to slaughter hogs and I was plunged much further out of my element. But that story needs pictures so it’ll have to wait.

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elves! cartoon elves!

After work today I went for a walk into Glebe. (Sydney’s neighbourhoods have some excellent names. I like living in Ultimo, which was named after a giant robot foe from the Avengers.) To get to Glebe from the office I cross a park. There’s another, more direct way that takes you past a couple of supermarkets but I was saving that for the loop back. And if I’d gone that way I wouldn’t be able to tell you about what is in this park.

There is a dog-racing track in this park. It has big modern stands and a gate and apparently on Friday nights greyhounds race, because the floodlights were on and the gravel patch near the exercise equipment was full to the chock of vehicles with greyhound-sized trailers and three out of four people in the park were walking these wispy sad-looking animals. (Sad-looking because of their buggy eyes in their skinny heads not because they seemed abused or anything.)

The actual track was still empty and I couldn’t see any way in that was on my path, so I didn’t hang around to check if there were actual mechanical rabbits involved or what have you. It all looked much nicer and less grotty than I’d pictured dog-tracks. Much more modern-looking than the horse-track I used to work at.

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cook flesh with fire

Getting the chance to barbecue is something I missed living in the condo. Reyn has a barbecue on the back deck though, so I’m getting back into practice.

Yesterday I was at my mom’s and I barbecued steaks and portobello mushrooms. The steaks had marinated in tequila and garlic for two days, and I grilled the mushrooms up with a raspberry vinaigrette and fresh rosemary. Both turned out pretty good. I always worry when cooking meat, since if I fuck it up it’s not me who has to suffer the eating of it.

While eating, my mom explained to Sri’s son that the steaks were marinated in booze because it was Mother’s Day and that’s how she wanted it. (He wasn’t a fan.) This led me off on a reminiscence about canoe trip steaks with Ernie and Dave’s uncles. I can’t remember if those steaks were actually soaking in whisky for four days of hiking or if they were just aging to perfection. Still the best damned pieces of meat ever.

The earlier part of Mother’s Day was spent watching the Jays win in style while Mom napped. Oh, and dressing the dog up to celebrate surviving cancer for a year. She got the shirt specially made since, surprisingly, it is hard to find a shirt for a dog (or infant, which is what she ended up buying because it was cheaper) that has “Cancer Survivor” preprinted onto it.

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book review: the dust of 100 dogs

In my super-secret job I’m never allowed to mention for reasons of national security I find myself in the position to recommend books sometimes. The Dust of 100 Dogs by A.S. King is one of these books that made its way across my workspace (can’t tell you if I have a desk or not, as that is a secret) and struck me as interesting. It’s the story of an Irish pirate and her reincarnation as a person in the late twentieth century after being cursed to spend 100 lifetimes as a dog. The cool thing is that Saffron (her 1990 self) retains all the memories of being 100 different dogs and of being Emer the badass pirate. And the great part of Emer’s memories include knowing where her last greatest treasure was buried. So yeah. Awesome.

There were several things that made this book better than the standard YA fare. First: I loved that it was set very specifically in 1990 for the “modern” parts. It made even that feel historical and obviated the need for today’s GPS and communication technology. In general I’m in favour of fiction being set in a specific year instead of “the present,” so there’re my biases.

Second, Saffron’s family is fucked up and [SPOILERS] they remain so right through the end of the book. There’s no redemption of the grasping mother who wants to live through her daughter’s success instead of doing something herself. Her father is a drug addict Vietnam vet and her brother steals from crippled people and burns down their home. You completely see why Saffron would want to go make a life for herself, memories of 300 years rattling around inside her head or not.

The sex in it is not what you might expect from a YA book too. It’s not all Gossip Girled up, there’re a couple of scenes of Emer (the pirate) getting raped and the villain spends a lot of time masturbating while watching the beach and telling the voices in his head how he’s not gay. So yeah, there’s that.

In all, what I liked about it was how it didn’t feel written to a YA formula. And in the back of the copy I read there’s an interview with the author and she says that she didn’t realize it was a YA book until her agent sold it as such. That makes sense to me. It makes it a bit weirder and out of place maybe, but a teen book I have no problem recommending.

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chomp

I read a fairly useless article about blogging this evening which had the following quote within it:

This, then, leads me to wonder whether bloggers are in-truth just sad and lonely people nobody cares about or listens to. Are they just lost souls who believe friendship, nay, intimacy can be found within a flickering computer screen?

Or just people who get bitten by dogs for no reason save winter madness?

I was walking to work this afternoon and at the intersection of Colony and Portage a yellowish Samoyed/Husky-style dog came bounding around the corner. People gave him a wide berth, being a large dog without a collar or an owner. He stopped in front of me while I looked at him, my hands in my coat pockets because it was ridiculous-cold out. Then he barked at me three times, chomped me on my right arm and ran off!

Needless to say I was stunned. Stunned and glad I was wearing lots of layers. I spent my shift of book-stacking analyzing the situation. It didn’t seem like a snarling angry dog, just an asshole who bit me for no reason. Did the dog think I was playing with him? Maybe, though my hands had still been in my pockets and he bit me hard enough to leave a (very very slight) bruise on my forearm. It was a bewildering thing to have happen.

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you could call me mainstream

I don’t like my mom’s dogs. Yet because I am a wonderful son, I looked after them for the weekend. I did this looking after without threatening to murder them in their little whine-filled cages even once. Fiona (the stupider of the two) decided that along with not wanting to piss on the deck, she wanted to pick up small rocks in her mouth and carry them while on her walks. I didn’t try to stop her. I’m pretty sure she never tried actually eating any of them.

I don’t know why I’m so tired today. I went to the Peace & Justice sunday school class at Charleswood this morning, but it was much more like one of those MCC orientation sessions than something that’d generate interestingness.

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mong kok hall of fame


graf
Originally uploaded by
Hungry J.

I found this alley by wandering around near the Mong Kok KCR station. Right near the corner was a stenciled “Let’s Support Street Art” and all down the wall of this one building was graffiti. Good stuff. Some fading and whatever in the lettering, not just tags.

As you get further down the alley you see that on the other side, sort of under an overpass is where some people have their cardboard shelters. And their big dogs.

So I didn’t get all the way down the alley the first time I went exploring.

The next time I was out in that area (we were looking for a working Slurpee machine at a 7Eleven) I showed the alley to my friend Deb. We walked in for a while until about the spot where I took this picture. That was when the dog was out and came up to us.

I could have sworn it had been chained up the last time, but it wasn’t barking, so we made nice doggie sounds at it and didn’t go any further.

It didn’t seem to take much more notice of us and pissed on the wall (too quickly for me to get a picture) while we slowly left the alley.

So then we’re on the street out a round the corner, deciding whether to go back or continue the Slurpee quest when the dog came running out of the alley and bit Deb on the thigh. Not hard, but still. Then it ran back to its alley.

I kind of felt bad for bringing her out there to get attacked by a mean old dog, but then later on Lantau Island someone else got sort of bit like that and I realized it was Hong Kong leading people into the hound’s maw, not me.

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