Mary Soderstrom's Blog, page 73
October 17, 2013
Day to Get Rid of Stuff: A Trip to the Eco-friendly Dump
Got rid of three dozen old batteries, a Mac that dates from 1995, several cans of paint and paint thinner, a dozen rotten planks that Lee took out of the front steps, and some other garbage by taking them all to the Ecocentre not far from where we live.Probably many cities have similar sites, where residents can leave off various kinds of no longer used stuff for recycling. Ours are called Ecocentres, and I'm quite impressed by how well organized they seem to be.
Much better than stuff going into land fill.
Published on October 17, 2013 13:48
October 15, 2013
Women to the Rescue? In the US Female Senators Come up with a Plan
There certainly are examples of women leaders who are just as tough, misguided and unsavory as their male counterparts: Sarah Palin, Margaret Thatcher and Bev Oda are examples.
But sometimes it seems that the Old Girls' Network can come up with good stuff. That may be the case in the current mess in Washington. The New York Times reports that the authors of a plan that may save the US from default on its debts and put government back to work are a handful of women of both parties who've worked together in the past on legislation.
The story says: "In a Senate still dominated by men, women on both sides of the partisan divide proved to be the driving forces that shaped a negotiated settlement. The three Republican women put aside threats from the right to advance the interests of their shutdown-weary states and asserted their own political independence."
It goes on: "Of the 13 senators on a bipartisan committee who worked on the deal framework, about half were women, even though women make up only 20 percent of the Senate. Senator John McCain of Arizona joked at several points in their meetings, “The women are taking over.”"
Good on them. But it remains to be seen if the Tea Party types will put the good of the country before their ideology.
But sometimes it seems that the Old Girls' Network can come up with good stuff. That may be the case in the current mess in Washington. The New York Times reports that the authors of a plan that may save the US from default on its debts and put government back to work are a handful of women of both parties who've worked together in the past on legislation.
The story says: "In a Senate still dominated by men, women on both sides of the partisan divide proved to be the driving forces that shaped a negotiated settlement. The three Republican women put aside threats from the right to advance the interests of their shutdown-weary states and asserted their own political independence."
It goes on: "Of the 13 senators on a bipartisan committee who worked on the deal framework, about half were women, even though women make up only 20 percent of the Senate. Senator John McCain of Arizona joked at several points in their meetings, “The women are taking over.”"
Good on them. But it remains to be seen if the Tea Party types will put the good of the country before their ideology.
Published on October 15, 2013 07:06
October 14, 2013
SOS: Reverse Dixiecrat Solution Needed
As usual Krugman comes through:
"The question for the next few days is whether plunging markets and urgent appeals from big business will stiffen the non-extremists’ spines. For as far as I can tell, the reverse-Dixiecrat solution is the only way out of this mess."
What he means is this: that in the next few days resolutions on continu"such measures were brought to the House floor. How? The answer is, they would get support from just about all Democrats plus some Republicans, mainly relatively moderate non-Southerners. As I said, Dixiecrats in reverse.:
Will Boehner put the welfare of the country and the world economy before his fear of being unseated by the radical fringe of his party? I'd like to think so, but I'm afraid he won't.
"The question for the next few days is whether plunging markets and urgent appeals from big business will stiffen the non-extremists’ spines. For as far as I can tell, the reverse-Dixiecrat solution is the only way out of this mess."
What he means is this: that in the next few days resolutions on continu"such measures were brought to the House floor. How? The answer is, they would get support from just about all Democrats plus some Republicans, mainly relatively moderate non-Southerners. As I said, Dixiecrats in reverse.:
Will Boehner put the welfare of the country and the world economy before his fear of being unseated by the radical fringe of his party? I'd like to think so, but I'm afraid he won't.
Published on October 14, 2013 08:44
Saturday Photo: Getting Ready for Thanksgiving at Jean Talon Market
Spent most of Saturday and all of Sunday either preparing for and eating our annual Thanksgiving feast.For maybe 12 years we've had friends and family over for a buffet that is always a lot of fun. We do turkey, some side dishes and a reserve dessert, and everyone brings something they'd like to share. As the years have past the kids have grown up, new ones have been born and the rest of us had become, ahem!, more mature.
The big surprise this year was Jake, who was two at the first of these dinners and now is the size of a line backer. Our Thomas was last year's baby, and now he cruises around, looking for interesting things to do. This year's baby, the little brother of Sivan who has the baby two years ago, is still in the hospital, but he was well represented by other members of the family.
And the new addition to the table was over-roasted field tomatoes with garlic, oregon and basil. Don't know why I didn't think of doing them before: delicious!
Published on October 14, 2013 08:35
October 9, 2013
The Urban Gardenener: Foraging in Kansas City and in the Woods
Great story in
The New York Times
today about serious use of invasive and otherwise normaly uncultivated plants for cooking. Linda Hezel supplies several trendy restaurants in Kansas City with "bedstraw, chickweed, henbit, dandelion, wild bergamot, red clover, dead nettle, lambs-quarters, wood sorrel, purslane, plantain (the leafy variety, not the banana)" as well as chicory (see photo taken here in Montreal.)She grows them on her organic farm, not far from the center of the Midwestern town, but apparently at least one other farm outside New York City also provides experimenting chefs.
Last year I collected some dandelions to cook like spinach, inspired by the elderly Mediterranean folk who still gather them all over Montreal as soon as they appear in lawns. We thought them not bad, but a lot of work, as even the ones that grew in our small backyard required a lot of work to clean.
What I liked about the NYT 's story is its emphasis on nuisance plants, unlike another elegy to foraging that appeared in The Globe and Mail last summer. It lauded forest foraging which, in my book, can be just another name for forest rape. All you need is a small army of city folks collecting rare forest plants to wipe out a species in an area. Look what has happened to ginseng in a number of areas: in the US gathering the plant on public lands is now illegal in several states because of over-foraging.
Invasive, foreign imports are another story however. Raspberries, blackberries and some grapes sometimes seem intent on taking over the world, and who's going to mourn the dandelions that get dug up in lawns?
Published on October 09, 2013 06:50
October 8, 2013
Well, Not Really Flying Down to Rio, But Something Similar
Went this morning to the Brazilian Consulate in Montreal to apply for my visa to go to Brazil in November. I wont' be flying down to Rio--won't go anywhere near it, actually--but the tickets are bought and I'm now working on lining up the interviews. Rather excited. More later. In the meantime check out the amazing dance routines om this 1933 film.
Published on October 08, 2013 11:36
October 7, 2013
Saturday Photo: Self-Censorship
This is the photo that I'm using on the hardcopy invitation to my book launches for my new collection of short stories,
Desire Lines: Stories of Love and Geography
next month. It's appropriate, in a way, because this sinuous path crossing the Champ des possibles open space near where I live started me thinking about the resonances of "desire lines." They are, urbanists say, the paths people choose to make when they want to get some place. They frequently have nothing to do with formal layout of streets and sidewalks and almost always they say a lot about people's aims.
But I can't say I'm too pleased with myself for using the photo to promote the two parties we're planning to launch the book. The cover, which I love, is a little racey and it's been mentioned to me that it's not the sort of thing that librarians and others might like to find in the hands of kids.
Since the image is a detail from a painting by Edwin Holgate, a member of Canada's legendary Group of Seven parinters, it shouldn't get much flack. But just the same I've buckled. The e-mail invitation will use the book cover, though.Whatever, you're all invited to attend one of both of the launches:
Wednesday November 6 at 7 p.m.
Librairie Drawn and Quarterly211, Bernard ouestMile End, Montreal (80, 435 and 160 buses)
And/or
Tuesday November 12 at 7 p.m.
Librairie Clio245-N. Boulevard St JeanPointe Claire, PQ, Plaza Point Claire
Published on October 07, 2013 05:55
October 2, 2013
Required Reading:Don't Let Anyone Run on Your Left
Great opinion piece in the
Vancouver Sun
(the Vancouver Sun!!!) that compares the recent BC election and the New York City Democratic primary which saw the front runner crumble before Bill de Blasio who ran on an unapologetic left wing platform.
There are lessons here not only for BC but also for the federal NDP. And it may be that Obama's people finally go the message which is the reason for him hanging tough on the budget issue right now.
Here, in part, is what political strategist Mira Oreck writes:
"Rather than a race to the centre, de Blasio offered a confident and courageous vision that spoke to New Yorkers, from the upscale brownstones in Brooklyn to public housing projects in the Bronx. He called for “an act of equalization in a city that is desperately falling into the habit of disparity.” De Blasio’s campaign blasted TV ads across the city describing him as “the only candidate that will raise taxes on the rich to fund early childhood education and after school programs.”
"It’s not often you hear a candidates say they’ll raise taxes and see their poll numbers rise.De Blasio’s primary campaign broke new ground...
" Rather than hurting him, however, de Blasio’s Tale of Two Cities surprisingly earned him more votes than his opponents in areas where the average income was upward of $170,000.
"His vision of a city that addresses income inequality spoke to people across the social spectrum.
She continues:
"A Tale of Two Cities rings true not only for New York City, but also for cities across the United States and increasingly for Canada. In British Columbia, where one in four children have lived in poverty for over a decade, every progressive campaign must place inequality — and the solutions to it — at the core of their message.
"De Blasio’s campaign proves that a strong, clear and unapologetic position on addressing inequality can draw support."
Are you listening Tom?
There are lessons here not only for BC but also for the federal NDP. And it may be that Obama's people finally go the message which is the reason for him hanging tough on the budget issue right now.
Here, in part, is what political strategist Mira Oreck writes:
"Rather than a race to the centre, de Blasio offered a confident and courageous vision that spoke to New Yorkers, from the upscale brownstones in Brooklyn to public housing projects in the Bronx. He called for “an act of equalization in a city that is desperately falling into the habit of disparity.” De Blasio’s campaign blasted TV ads across the city describing him as “the only candidate that will raise taxes on the rich to fund early childhood education and after school programs.”
"It’s not often you hear a candidates say they’ll raise taxes and see their poll numbers rise.De Blasio’s primary campaign broke new ground...
" Rather than hurting him, however, de Blasio’s Tale of Two Cities surprisingly earned him more votes than his opponents in areas where the average income was upward of $170,000.
"His vision of a city that addresses income inequality spoke to people across the social spectrum.
She continues:
"A Tale of Two Cities rings true not only for New York City, but also for cities across the United States and increasingly for Canada. In British Columbia, where one in four children have lived in poverty for over a decade, every progressive campaign must place inequality — and the solutions to it — at the core of their message.
"De Blasio’s campaign proves that a strong, clear and unapologetic position on addressing inequality can draw support."
Are you listening Tom?
Published on October 02, 2013 05:36
October 1, 2013
US Shutdown: You've Got to Laugh if You're Not Going to Cry
The New Yorker's
Andy Borowitz has been posting daily about the ridiculousness of the tragedy unfolding South of the Border.
What about this:
"In a special Sunday radio address, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) delivered a health tip to the American people, advising them to delay getting cancer for a year.
“We’re involved in a high-stakes fight over our freedom from centralized government control of our lives,” said Mr. Boehner, speaking on behalf of his House colleagues. “You can do your part by delaying getting cancer.”"
And this:
UNITED STATES (The Borowitz Report)—Millions of Tea Party loyalists fled the United States in the early morning hours today, seeking what one of them called “the American dream of liberty from health care.”
Harland Dorrinson, 47, a tire salesman from Lexington, Kentucky, packed up his family and whatever belongings he could fit into his Chevy Suburban just hours before the health-insurance exchanges opened, joining the Tea Party’s Freedom Caravan with one goal in mind: escape from Obamacare.
“My father didn’t have health care and neither did my father’s father before him,” he said. “I’ll be damned if I’m going to let my children have it.”
But after driving over ten hours to the Canadian border, Mr. Dorrinson was dismayed to learn that America’s northern neighbor had been in the iron grip of health care for decades.
“The border guard was so calm when he told me, as if it was the most normal thing in the world,” he said. “It’s like he was brainwashed by health care.”
Turning away from Canada, Mr. Dorrinson joined a procession of Tea Party cars heading south to Mexico, noting, “They may have drug cartels and narcoterrorism down there, but at least they’ve kept health care out.”
Mr. Dorrinson was halfway to the southern border before he heard through the Tea Party grapevine that Mexico, too, has public health care, as do Great Britain, Japan, Turkey, Spain, Belgium, New Zealand, Slovenia, and dozens of other countries to which he had considered fleeing.
Undaunted, Mr. Dorrinson said he had begun looking into additional countries, like Chad and North Korea, but he expressed astonishment at a world seemingly overrun by health care.
“It turns out that the United States is one of the last countries on earth to get it,” he said. “It makes me proud to be an American.”
What about this:
"In a special Sunday radio address, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) delivered a health tip to the American people, advising them to delay getting cancer for a year.
“We’re involved in a high-stakes fight over our freedom from centralized government control of our lives,” said Mr. Boehner, speaking on behalf of his House colleagues. “You can do your part by delaying getting cancer.”"
And this:
UNITED STATES (The Borowitz Report)—Millions of Tea Party loyalists fled the United States in the early morning hours today, seeking what one of them called “the American dream of liberty from health care.”
Harland Dorrinson, 47, a tire salesman from Lexington, Kentucky, packed up his family and whatever belongings he could fit into his Chevy Suburban just hours before the health-insurance exchanges opened, joining the Tea Party’s Freedom Caravan with one goal in mind: escape from Obamacare.
“My father didn’t have health care and neither did my father’s father before him,” he said. “I’ll be damned if I’m going to let my children have it.”
But after driving over ten hours to the Canadian border, Mr. Dorrinson was dismayed to learn that America’s northern neighbor had been in the iron grip of health care for decades.
“The border guard was so calm when he told me, as if it was the most normal thing in the world,” he said. “It’s like he was brainwashed by health care.”
Turning away from Canada, Mr. Dorrinson joined a procession of Tea Party cars heading south to Mexico, noting, “They may have drug cartels and narcoterrorism down there, but at least they’ve kept health care out.”
Mr. Dorrinson was halfway to the southern border before he heard through the Tea Party grapevine that Mexico, too, has public health care, as do Great Britain, Japan, Turkey, Spain, Belgium, New Zealand, Slovenia, and dozens of other countries to which he had considered fleeing.
Undaunted, Mr. Dorrinson said he had begun looking into additional countries, like Chad and North Korea, but he expressed astonishment at a world seemingly overrun by health care.
“It turns out that the United States is one of the last countries on earth to get it,” he said. “It makes me proud to be an American.”
Published on October 01, 2013 18:14
September 29, 2013
Saturday Photo: Dahlias
I used to think that the best flowers were those of early spring. Perhaps that's because spring is when I'm really thinking gardens. But late summer and fall also have their gorgeous blooms, like these dahlias. Quite lovely!
Published on September 29, 2013 10:45


