Sunday, October 30, 2011

Winter 2011-2012


The active season of hiking and biking has ended for me.  There’s one more Ramble and hot dog roast on Tuesday, but I can’t go because I have an appointment at the Kelowna General Hospital at one that day for an ultrasound on my left shoulder.  It’s been almost a year since I injured it coming down from Knox Mountain and it still hurts a bit at times.  I don’t know if I’ll need an operation or not, but I’m going through all the steps to try to find out what’s wrong. 

I went to the Vernon Outdoors Club banquet last night with a couple, Mo and John, whom I met hiking just a couple of months ago.  I was surprised to walk in and greet and be greeted by so many people I knew.  I had a real feeling of belonging and was even able to introduce Mo and John to some people.  I saw my friend Priscilla there with her husband whom I had never met.  That was a laugh because I discovered that he had spent much of his youth in Port Arthur; we probably saw each other at the A&W (the A& Root) at Intercity on a Saturday night when the gangs from the two cities met there to hang out and sometimes fight, the boys that is.  The girls just got out of the cars once in a while to look around, checking out the competition and/or prospects depending on the sex.

Monday I got a shock when I went on ‘my itineraries’ in Expedia just to check my Korean flights.  Only the return portion was there.  What followed was an almost 2 hour telephone conversation with Fadi in Egypt.  He said that Expedia always alerts people to changes made in their flight plans.  This time they hadn’t.  Korean Air had changed their schedule and both my flights to Korea were scrapped.  Fortunately I had noticed it early enough and he, after a lot of searching, was able to get me almost identical flights on the same day, May 1.  The whole trip will take longer, but that might be a good thing because the original plan did not give me much time between landing in Vancouver and taking off again for Seoul.  The times are still good.

As far as other plans are concerned, all the lines I threw into the water for volunteering began to bob this week.  I went to the first meeting for Immigrant Services Volunteers on Thursday and got together with the head of the Adaptive Skiing Program at Silver Star on Friday.  So winter is beginning.  I now have a downhill membership at Silver Star and a cross country one at Sovereign.  I took my newly found skis to be sharpened and waxed yesterday, and as Thursday’s bike ride in Lumby was the coldest I’ve ever survived in my life and today’s hike in Kal Park was great but also cold, I’m going to get out the winter clothes and move into the next season.  Daylight Saving time begins next Sunday and although the leaves have not all fallen from the trees and I still have a couple of roses in bloom, the larches are yellow and people say that it’s time to head for the hills.  Apparently the Okanagan is grey much of the winter unless you go up to the ski slopes where you’re above it all.  We’ll see.  

I asked Marie about her dog's name, and it's Osito because os means bear in Spanish and 'ito' is the diminutive and he looked like a little bear when they got him.   

John, Mo, Maggie and her man and Priscilla having lunch on the Kal Lake Park hike.

The view from the top of Noble Canyon

My 'art shot' of a hiking pole and boot at the top of Noble Canyon.  The end of the first season with the Vernon Outdoors Club.

The gang preparing for the last bike of the season on a cold, grey morning in Lumby.  Fortunately, we began and ended at the Blue Ox Pub.  Some of us broke with tradition and had beer with our lunch instead of the usual coffee.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Stability


It’s been a week like all weeks, filled with the mundane matters that have to be done to stay alive, but this one had more than its share of incidents that called into question my mental and physical stability.  It began with a quiet Monday in which the highlight was a trip to Canadian Tire to buy ugly winter rims and have the tires changed in preparation for winter.  Tuesday started off well, with a Ramble to a beautiful location above Lake Okanagan.  For the first time, I felt confident enough to volunteer to be the ‘sweep’. This involves carrying a radio, staying at the back to make sure no one is left behind and counting the gang at 3 different spots.  I volunteered before everyone arrived and found the counting part stretched my capacities to stay focused and count people as they passed me.  There were 49 by the time we left.  All went well, but when I got home things took a turn for the worse.  I decided to go into the garage and continue my preparations for winter by bringing in the skis to see what work had to be done on them after over two years in a bag.  I couldn’t see them in the spot where I was sure Bert had put them on the day I moved.  I called him, hoping that I was wrong and they were in his garage.  They weren’t.  He and Peggy listened and calmed my nerves, especially concerning how deflated I felt about someone having got into the garage and stolen the skis.  It shook my faith in what I had believed to be my safe neighborhood.  They suggested that I tell the police, which I did on Wednesday after seeing the optometrist whose office is near the RCMP station.  I also called a woman I know who got me interested in the handicapped ski program.  She said she had a pair of skis I could use until I did whatever I was going to do.  I decided to move things I didn’t want stolen out of the garage and into the basement.  As I was doing that, I saw some boards left over from the renovations that looked all crooked, so I went to straighten them, and you guessed it. Behind them were the skis.  Right where I had cunningly hidden them shortly after the move, too smart by half.  I was really happy to have my faith in the neighborhood restored, but now my faith in my memory was in tatters.  I talked with Ina on Skype shortly afterwards, and my admission of vapidity prompted her to tell me that for about 2 years now she has had a notebook in her desk which she has entitled, ‘Where did I hide that?’ into which she writes down where she has hidden some pieces of valuable jewelry and to whom she has lent what books.  I felt a little less alone in my idiocy after our talk, but none-the-less concerned about my mental stability. 

On Thursday I went to dinner with George and Marie, he’s a vet, and they rented our house while they built theirs.  They are becoming good friends.  I brought home their dog, Aussi tot, for the weekend while they went to see their daughter in Vancouver.  I spell the dog’s name as I do because that’s how it sounds when Marie says it and as she’s originally from Quebec.  I’m going to ask them about the name when they pick him up in about an hour.  He’s a wonderful dog, and between him and the Sunday hike, I’ve walked my legs off this weekend.  This brings me to the question of my physical stability, which was called into question this morning when I took Aussi tot for a walk before leaving for the hike.  I thought he would need to have his morning turn out, but he didn’t.  I however turned my ankle and fell flat on my face at the bottom of a few stairs on the walk.  Fortunately I only bruised and bashed my nose and seem to have sprained a finger.  So ends another week. 

Me as proud 'sweep' on the hike to a spot overlooking Lake Okanagan.  I'm holding the official radio.

There is a bit of red in the fall here.  I saw these trees on a walk with Aussi tot.

Aussi tot on his bed by the front door

Snow on the path to the top of Silver Star today

A fellow traveller, Sue, enthusiastically beginning her lunch at the top of Silver Star

Monday, October 17, 2011

Oct.8 to 16, 2011


Eight days in October with the Van de Vyveres.  Well, not fully 8 for me, but I had 2 dinners for seven here, more cooking than I’ve done in two years, went out to dinner twice at Bert and Peggy’s and enjoyed the company of Brian and Cathy at my house for two nights, lots of food, wine, talk, fun and even tequila.  We tried it the MacMillan way, a Mexi-Caesar.  It was good, but I still think I like tequila straight with salt first and lime after.  I drank more than I have in months and spent today with my head feeling like an old sponge.  I went from one household job to the next in a semi trance and then walked to the Town Cinema to see the bi-weekly Monday movie, “ The Guard’.  It was ‘feckin’ great.  For the first few minutes it seemed a bit clichéd, but it soon became an entertaining mix of profanity, brutality and humor which had me humming and smiling as I walked home. 

The only other highlight of the week was buying a bike, which I finally did on Wed.  After driving to Kelowna to have one last look at a Brodie, I came back to Vernon and bought a Trek.  I had looked at one earlier, but on Wed., I was lucky because when I went back they had just put together a maroon Trek 7.2, 2012.  That’s the model I wanted but in a better color than the 2011 one I had looked at.  It was only ten dollars more, so I bought it.  I spent a couple of hours on Thursday practicing working the gears and then rode up to the college to join some other bikers who were waiting there for Michael Schratter, a local man who has biked about 36,000 kilometers all over the world in the last year and a half trying to raise awareness and acceptance of the fact that about one in five Canadians suffers from some form of mental illness.  He himself does.  He hopes to raise money and fight the stigma that surrounds all mental and psychological disorders.  He has a good blog called, ‘ridedon’thide.’ We had a police escort as we drove with him down to the Canadian Mental Health Association offices where the Vernon Vipers hockey team, the mayor and many others cheered him on.  He made a very good speech and then there was a barbecue.  By chance, I was in the background of the picture that made it into the local paper, so I’m a real Vernonite now and Brian Van de Vyvere has more to mock me with.  He has always found the fact that I was a counselor at Sherwood Forest Girls’ Camp to be a source of hilarity and now my being a Vernon biker sends him into fits of laughter.  I find it a bit funny myself, but as Jim used to say, “Go for it.” 

Brian and Cathy at my house

Rob and his intended at my house after dinner.  Because we won't be able to go to their wedding in England on Dec. 28, we celebrated with them this week.

The Trek

My friend Priscilla (in the blue jacket and bike helmet) approaching Michael Schratter who is her son's very good friend.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Oct. 9, 2011


Last Sunday at this time, I was just arriving home from Victoria after a long day of rising at 5:30 am at Barb and Terry’s, taking Bill to the airport, carrying on to the ferry and arriving there just a minute too late to catch the 7 o’clock, resting in the car and drinking coffee until 9 and driving home to Vernon.  I was so tired I just unpacked, had a bath, ate a bowl of noodle soup and went to bed without setting the alarm.  So I missed the Monday morning Skype with Jay.  The house was in good shape and the cedars and new bushes that I worried might suffer in the hot sun were happily enjoying their third day of rain.  Vernon has entered a rainy fall; the camel hair hills are soaked to a dull dun color.  Even my parched lawn has a faint greenish tinge combined with the dark grey clay.  I miss the colors of the season in the Gatineau, but I do have some bright roses left. 

Since I’ve been back, I’ve put away the summer clothes and brought out the winter.  I keep the mid season things out all the time, and this year I tried to make sure the stuff I’ll need for Korea in May would be easy to get at.  The weather has been cool all week but that didn’t interfere with the outdoors club bike in Armstrong on Thursday.  I began as usual cursing the long ‘faux plat’ and ended as I always do thinking that biking is wonderful.  Many of the roads had been gravel and not too hilly, perfect conditions for my old bike and me.  I felt so elated I even went to the club G.M. with Priscilla that night and made the first serious investigations into buying a new bike the next day.  Good as it was on the gravel, the old one is heavy and I could use a few more gears.  I went to the 2 bike stores in Vernon and have a possible purchase in each.  The decision should be made by late next week.  On Friday I had a fitting for my host’s uniform for the BC Winter Games in February.  That’s bound to be an experience.  The woman running the show seems very efficient, and I will see more of Donna, the Caring Clown, whom I met at the Filipino Fiesta.  She’s usually good for a laugh.  Saturday I awoke around 6:30 with a cold nose.  After checking the manuals for the gas furnace and the furnace itself, I determined that the problem must be with the thermostat, which was just reading ‘LO’ and some things that were neither letters nor numbers.  I could not find any papers for it so I went on line but it was hopeless.  I emailed Honeywell with my question about how to open the thermostat and had breakfast.  I tried calling the company that had installed the whole system, but of course they weren’t working on Thanksgiving weekend.  The house wasn’t really that cold in the bright light of day after a strong cup of coffee, so I carried on with my planned bike ride with Marie and her friend.  It was sunny and we went all over areas of Vernon that were new to me.  When I got home I decided to try to open the thermostat and install new batteries myself, but not without reservations.  Mom used to say that I was a member of the awkward squad, and Jim agreed that if there were a wrong way of doing something I would find it.  So I began very carefully feeling all around the unit for something to push or press.  But it was hopeless.  I finally tried just pulling but without enough conviction it turns out because a woman I hiked with today drove me home, came in and yanked it apart.  I replaced the batteries, the furnace hummed into action and we celebrated with a gin and tonic.    

Bill on Mount Doug in Victoria

The last roses of summer in my front garden

Lake Okanagan from Pincushion Mountain 

Bright green moss on Ponderosa pines and a splash of yellow poplar leaves in the distance.