Saturday, June 26, 2010

Friday, May 1, 2009

I'VE MOVED

Read me here: nikkireimer.com

Friday, March 6, 2009

why thank you, i'd love a coke.....



frank o'hara is wonderful.

(viewed at pursued by a bear)

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Why should you pay for my hobby?

Great post at Masthead online on the current threat to small magazines.

if i had a dollar....




for every time this kid ended up bloody after encountering a spiky plant.....

Seriously, it happens at least once a decade. You should have seen his butt after he fell on a cactus circa 1994.

Check out Robert Starr's wonderful photo blog of the WOMEN tour here.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Saturday walk

after Kiyooka?

after Kiyooka?

landscape

trees

tomato anyone?

hungry?

"We like to remember this tree. It fought in the war."

"We like to remember this tree. It fought in the war."

rolling and rolling

playful

Sinclair centre

Sinclair Centre

east cordova

E. Cordova

east cordova

E. Cordova

black-and-white

oh, hai

Saturday, February 28, 2009

goddamn it harper!


Eeeek! I have been remiss from you, sweet internet, for quite some time. (I had the magical strep throat mutating thing which kept me on the couch with blankets over my head for several weeks.)

Recent situations have made me want to dive back under the covers, however. (This means you, Mr. Moore.)

Sachi, as usual, outlines the situation far more cleverly thank I, so I urge you to go here to read her take on the current threat to little literary magazines in Canada.

There is also a good article at Bookninja.

If you love poetry (or even if you just love the poet(s) in your life) I urge you to:

-Join this Facebook group

-Subscribe to a Canadian literary magazine today! (Magazines Canada has a Buy 2 Get 1 FREE offer good till March 15)

-Submit to STEPHEN HARPER magazine:
STEPHEN HARPER was started as the first magazine under new funding guidelines made by the Canadian Periodical Fund. We believe that the best response to these new guidelines is to try to produce a literary journal streamlined enough to meet the new realities of today’s publishing industry. STEPHEN HARPER has an official subscription base of 413 – each MP and senator in the Canadian government is a subscriber, including our namesake! As well, STEPHEN HARPER will be starting a list of unsubscribers (the SH! list) of people not quite lucky enough to be members of Canada’s own government, but who still wish to receive the light of STEPHEN HARPER into their heart.

-Write to the following:

Minister of Canadian Heritage: Hon. James Moore

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-9650
F: 613-992-9868
E: moorej@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
2603 St. John’s St.
Port Moody, BC V3H 2B5
T: 604-937-5650
F: 604-937-5601

Liberal Heritage Critic: Pablo Rodriguez

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-5080
F: 613-992-1710
E: rodripa@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
7450, Les Galeries d’Anjou Blvd, Suite 530
Anjou, QC, H1M 3M3
T: 514-353-5044
F: 514-353-3050

NDP Heritage Critic: Charlie Angus

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-2919
F: 613-995-0477
E: angus.c@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
20 Duncan Avenue S.
PO Box 276
Kirland, ON P2N 3H7
T: 705-567-2747
F: 705-567-5232

Bloc québecois Heritage Critic: Carole Lavallée

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-996-2416
F: 613-995-6973
E: lavalC@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
110-5540 Chambly
Saint-Hubert, QC J3Y 3P1
T: 450-926-5979
F: 450-926-5985

Liberal Leader: Michael Ignatieff

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-6364
F: 613-992-5880
E: ignatm@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
656 The Queensway
Etobicoke, ON M8Y 1K7
T: 416-251-5510
F: 416-251-2845

NDP Leader: Jack Layton

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-995-7224
F: 613-995-4565
E: laytoj@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
221 Broadway Avenue, Suite 100
Toronto, ON M4M 2G3
T: 416-405-8914
F: 416-405-8918

Bloc Québecois Leader: Gilles Duceppe

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-6779
F: 613-954-2121
E: duceppe.g@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
1200 Papineau Ave, Suite 350
Montreal, QC H2K 4R5
T: 514-522-1339
F: 514-522-9899

Conservative Leader: Rt. Hon. Stephen Harper

House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
T: 613-992-4211
F: 613-941-6900
E: harpes@parl.gc.ca

Constituency Office
1600-90th Avenue SW, Suite A-203
T: 403-253-7990
F: 403-253-8203

Remember to write MPs c/o both the House of Commons and their constituency offices. That way their entire staff will know about your concerns.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Toronto Star article on Sheldrick Wildlife Trust



Go here to read the article

In Defense of Animals (IDA) Releases 2008 "Ten Worst Zoos for Elephants" List

Perhaps this blog is more than a bit about pachyderms.

I could only skim this because it made me feel sick inside, though I very much support the work that In Defense of Animals does, and believe that the compilation of a list of 10 worst zoos for elephants is a valuable step towards raising further awareness regarding the suffering of these incredible mammals in captivity, and hopefully mobilizing more efforts to move them to sanctuaries, I'm just too soft to read all the details. It makes me too sad.

Visit helpelephants.com to learn how you can help elephants in zoos.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

all things great and small




























I've been trying to reconcile my crushing, pre-cognitize love for critters of every kind with my need to put theory behind my ideas. I'm not there yet. I don't think it's impossible. But it could take a while. Years, even.

(To the right: Ned, an elephant confiscated from his owner and placed with The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee. As you can see from the picture, Ned was very emaciated upon his arrival at the Sanctuary. They are slowly nursing him back to health. For more about elephant welfare, and and to learn why they should never be in captivity, visit the Sanctuary online at Elephants.com)


A few quotes from Thalia Field's Incarnate that have me some of my re-thinking my (liberal, middle-class, privileged) emotions:

While Hediger [sic] famously watched zoo-keepers
psyche-out the inmates with excessive petting
killing with a kindness as unbearable as direct flame
the keepers's self-love of love
a revolting and deadly obsession with touching
the worst possible torture
within a general overarching torture

(p.104)


I'm thinking about the 41 dead stingrays at the Calgary Zoo, and how the officials still don't know what killed them. And why, in this year of our lord [sic] 2008, must we humans still insist on touching the animals?




only tameness, if achieved, is calming, finally
the suffering wild animal resigns
to the stink of the enemy's hands
on everything


(p. 107)


Our sense of entitlement, as humans. Our sense of ownership over the natural world. How it's killing us and we don't even know it. Dr. Georgia Mason talking to Bob MacDonald on Quirks and Quarks about her study about "whether zoos are a good thing or not for elephants." The fact that captive elephants live only half as long as their wild counterparts. How Dr. Mason argues persuasively, I thought, against the keeping of elephants in captivity, and moving them around from zoo to zoo, until the very end of the interview, where she merely suggests that perhaps we need to improve how we move them. I respectfully disagree. Layperson and poet though I am, I think these animals are more intelligent and emotional than we can apprehend with our knowledge and our science, and I maintain that it is as damaging to an elephant to be moved every seven years as it would be to a human to move him or her every seven years, away from friends and family, into a strange situation and with no say on the matter. Think about it. How would you cope?


as zoos get upgraded with scented toys
and other props, artificial snowbanks and "real" carcasses
eliciting new repertoire and better performances
for the captive audience
and still the keepers wonder why hiding remains most
critical to the survival of animals


(p. 121)

The baby elephant that died at the Calgary Zoo

The baby giraffe that died at the Vancouver zoo

Hazina the hippo who died after transfer to the Calgary Zoo

The baby gorilla that died at the Calgary Zoo
(is anyone else seeing a theme here?)

Baby lemurs abandoned at the Winnipeg Zoo


Why do we think they own them?

B.C. snowfalls causes slick roads and cancelled flights



So sayeth the good folks at CBC.ca.

Whilst I know the prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba - hell, the rest of the country - surely will have no sympathies for our -1 C temperatures and light snow, might I remind you that at least the buses still run in your part of the world?

We decided to set out on foot from a friend's place on Normandy Drive last night around 11:20 when we realized there'd be no chance of getting a cab. Walked the 7 blocks to Renfrew street. Then discovered that, idiots that we are, we should have confirmed if the buses were even running before we left our friends' place. According to the text message service that Translink offers, they were, though there were no signs of any buses in the entire time we were out in the (mild) Winter Wonderland.

We have normal cellular phones without web technology, so there'd be no checking the Translink Alerts for us.

Set off again northwards on Renfrew, imagining that we'd make it to the next bus stop or so before a bus arrived. Again, no buses appeared. Waited at a bus stop just south of Grandview Highway for awhile. Wondered why there are no customer service numbers for Translink posted anywhere on the bus stops, or the bus shelters, anywhere. Sure would've been nice to call a number to confirm our suspicions that the buses weren't in operation. Yep, sure would've been nice.

Finally flagged down a cab, who said he'd take us up Renfrew to our street, but "no side streets." Yeah, okay, fine buddy. A little bit further, and a car was spun out ahead of us. The cabbie wanted to drop us off right there to wait for the bus, because he wasn't going to get stuck. I'm just trying to get home, he says. Yeah, so are we, I yell.

We convince him to turn around and head west, then take us up Nanaimo. He yells at us for giving him attitude. I'm sure he's had a rough night as well, but my reaction to him was not 'attitude' but rather rising panic as I see where the direction our situation may be heading. I have Raynaud's, so getting stranded outside, even in the relatively balmy -1 temperatures and light snow, is more than an inconvenience for me.

It occurs to me, as I sit silent and chastened in the back of the cab, that what feels like fear and panic on the inside of a person often reads as aggression to others. Surely that's the error that fell poor Robert Dziekanski a year ago? Reacting with emotion rather than subservient gratitude?

At our street we thank the cabbie, apologize, and tip him 30%.

So we finally made it home at around 1 in the morning. Took off our snow encrusted pants and made some tea. Felt grateful to be home.

I notice the CBC story quotes a Translink spokesperson that "Buses in Vancouver avoided some routes on Saturday night," and wonder how at the time we might have learned which routes, exactly? All's well that ends well, but...

Thursday, December 11, 2008

feel good story of the day



It's almost Christmas, I'm feeling charitable. Here's a sweet little story that suggests the big bad old world ain't so evil after all (courtesy CBC): Boy, 3, with cerebral palsy can keep his pony

For extra goodness, watch the video. Try not to weep. I dare you.