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Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

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Every once in a while, Debbie shares new art, writing and resources; subscribe below. Browse the archives here.

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Sunday
Apr172005

telescopes and a view to a filk



So last night, Jeff and I went to the Star Party at the Ontario Science Centre with our friend Andy ("aiabx" in Blatherchat) to celebrate International Astronomy Day. Andy set up his telescope in the parking lot along with dozens other members of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada Toronto Centre while the public eagerly lined up to look at the sky.

I had fun wandering from telescope to telescope as a member of the eager public, peering at craters on the moon, Saturn, Jupiter, and a binary star system called Alpha Canum Venitacorum (thanks for the spelling help, Andy!). I've only attended a few of the RASC events, but have found the astronomers to be remarkably friendly.

I would have taken photos except I didn't want to use flash, because then the remarkably friendly astronomers would probably not be as friendly since a bright light like that would make it difficult to see the night sky until their eyes readjusted.

<


Starting to get back to my German language studies again, by the way. I'm gradually working my way through the German version of Michael Ende's Neverending Story (thanks, Gary!) with an English version for reference, listening to my German language audio course, listening to the German pop music CDs given to Urban Tapestry by Kirstin Tanger.

Speaking of Germans, I'm also very much enjoying listening to Ju's and Katy's CD, A View To A Filk. The songs on this CD are so well-written; I love the melodic lines and the gorgeous harmonies. And the lyrics are wonderful (and even more amazing when you consider that English isn't their first language). Juliane Honisch wrote all the lyrics, and Katy Dröege wrote some of the music.

Here are some MP3 excerpts from two of my favourite tracks:

A Thousand Ships
No Frogs Please

You can find more information and clips at their Web site. Allison, Jodi and I will be staying with both Katy and Ju when we visit Germany this fall.

37 more days until we get the house.


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Friday
Apr152005

tubs and taps



Today's photos are from visits to various tubs, taps, and rug stores yesterday with Jeff and Ginny in preparation for our upcoming renovations in our New House (possession in 39 days!). Our planned renovations include:

(1) Adding a wall to the bedroom. At present, none of the rooms above the basement currently have doors except for the bathrooms; the current owner did this to open up the house, let in more light and space. We love the result, but before we bought the house, I insisted that we agree to get a door for the bedroom for privacy but mainly for my own sanity: I tend to get up earlier than Jeff and want to be able to use the rest of the house (have breakfast, shower, etc.) without waking him up.

(2) Revamping the master bathroom. The room is quite small, with a bathtub and no stand-up shower. We're going to be replacing pretty much everything, including the bathtub and vanity, replacing the tiles and wallpaper, adding a shower.



(3) Finishing my half of the basement so I can use it as a home office. Right now the room has a concrete floor and is not insulated for regular use; it was pretty cold when we've visited, and the cold floor chilled my feet even when I had slippers on the second visit.

We'll also be doing other renovationstuff like replacing the carpet, but the changes above are the major ones.

Anyway, now we're starting to choose bathroom stuff and carpetstuff. My mom-in-law used to be an interior designer, so was a huge help in taking us to places that specialize in the kind of things we need. But wow, what an overwhelming amount of choice. I've never seen so many different types of taps in one place, for example. And holy cow, some of the showers we saw were huge elaborate things, with all kinds of nozzles and buttons and settings. Jacuzzi tubs the size of small swimming pools. Crystal basins that looked like they'd be more at home in an art gallery than a bathroom. Computerized toilets. Taps that cost the same as a new iMac.



The photo at the top of the page is of me trying out a tub for size. I'm a HUGE fan of baths, as you may have noticed from past Blatherings. One of my favourite relaxation activities is soaking in a very deep tub with a dog-eared comfort book. Sometimes I'll pass on the book and just light candles, turn off the lights, float into blissland. Anyway, I did a lot of climbing in and out of tubs yesterday.

For me, the perfect tub needs to:

a) Be deep enough for a truly satisfying soak. I hate the tubs in most hotels because they're way too shallow. They also don't tend to have good enough lighting for reading, but I digress.

b) Have a comfortable back slope to lean against. Too vertical, and you end up sitting instead of leaning...a problem with some older tubs, and some claw tubs.

Everyone goes ga-ga over jacuzzi-style tubs, but we had one at our old place and I rarely used the jacuzzi feature. Too noisy and too much of a hassle for me. They also add about $1000 to the cost of a tub, so we opted for a non-jacuzzi style.



Eventually, Jeff and I hope to put in a Japanese style tub as well as a small sauna in the basement, but that will probably have to wait a while.

The photo at the bottom of the page is of the rug I think I've decided on for my home office. I wanted a relatively inexpensive but good quality carpet that was fairly hardy and with interesting colours or texture.

Thanks for all the feedback to my Mainstream chic post, in both private e-mail and public message board. One private e-mail reminded me of something else that drives me nuts: the tendency of some people to like a song UNTIL they hear it played on a popular radio station.

Anyway, here's a selection from the public postings:

Bill S.:

"You know, in the same way that just because lots of people like something it isn't necessarily GREAT, just because lots of people like something it isn't necessarily crap.

My taste is my taste, and my choices are my choices.

Of course, coming from someone who publicly admits to liking "Chevy Van" by Sammy Johns, this probably means nothing *grin*"




Annie W.:

"Mike Whitaker once threatened to make a small run of T-shirts which read something like:

"Monogamous, married, straight, vanilla christian. Dare to be different!"

I want one.

I liked 'Twister'. Enough to buy the DVD and quote great lumps of dialogue. I loved "The Da Vinci Code" too.

I remember someone once saying that they couldn't believe I was "buying into the whole 'dress girls in pink' thing". Why not? My daughter looks cute in pink!

Guess I'm mainstream too. And I like vanilla icecream the best ;-) "


From Andy:

"Re: schlock
On the one hand, as far as I am concerned, feel free to watch whatever crap you like. I enjoy watching steaming rubbish as much as anyone else. Whenever Total Recall is on TV, I always watch it, so I know schlock. However...

I have two arguments against it.

First; if all you ever get is schlock, if all you ever read is lowbrow crap, then your brain will atrophy and you will become a boring person with no deeper thoughts that "That's funny! Adam Sandler said 'poop'!". Fortunately, you have Jeff, who has pretty decent taste in things, and frequent contact with parki, whose taste is nearly as excellent as mine, so even if you wanted to live a life of pure schlock, you'd get some culture by osmosis.

Second: Movies are a business. If the people who make movies see that Charlie's Angels 2 makes a pile of money, and Eternal Sunshine doesn't, guess what kind of movies *I* will be stuck with next year? Yeah, Charlie's Angels 3. I'm the one who suffers because you like crap.

The solution? Watch it on TV, or steal crap on the internet, and spend your money on things that *I* want. Pretty good plan, eh?"


From Allison:

"It's kind of like being a "Lost" fan right now. In your heart of hearts you know there are thousands of people like you planning their lives around Wednesday at 8 p.m. but to read LJ you'd feel you're the worst kind of mainstream hack for liking the show :). Hee, I'll keep watching it, anyway.

And while I won't listen to one movie critic, I will listen to a bunch. If fifty movie critics are saying a movie is terrible (say at "Rotten Tomatoes"), odds are -really- good a movie is terrible :). Just like if those same fifty critics like a movie I might not have considered, I may just give it a chance. Once I'm there, though, I'll make up my own mind."


From chirosinger:

"Hey, I like ABBA and Titanic too. I even listen to Neil Diamond and the Carpenters! I think mainstream is just fine. But hey, we're musicians which puts us out on the edge of something, right?"

Rug for my new office!


From Lady Turpentine:

"I've said this many times: I like what I like and make no apologies! Yes, I like Hall & Oates, Goo Goo Dolls, Gin Blossoms, Kiss and Bon Jovi! And so what if I like chick lit and big, trashy novels? If it makes you happy, it can't be that bad (yes, I like Sheryl Crow, too!)."

From Erin:

"Debbie, the movie you were referring to was "13 Going on 30," which I have not only seen but own on DVD!

Like Lady Turpentine, I also unabashedly love the Goos and Bon Jovi...hey, sometimes you just need a hot front man and catchy tunes. ;)

And ABBA is great, too. Loved Mamma Mia! Heehee... "


From singlemaltsilk:

"Hey, I liked the first CA movie too, and I can't tell you how many times I've watched "Miss Congeniality" ;)

And vanilla? Allow me to quote my response to a friend who, at the time, was bemoaning her vanillitude:

"Vanilla (which comes from an orchid and is considered to be an aphrodisiac) is one of the most expensive pure spices in the world, second only to saffron. Every chocolate recipe I have that's worth a damn includes a healthy shot of vanilla, but I have plenty of vanilla recipes that stand alone without the aid of chocolate."

See? The mainstream is the rootstock of the alternative. Without us, they're just so much tinder. Neener neener neener. ;)"



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Wednesday
Apr132005

mainstream chic



Yes, I admit it. I do actually enjoy listening to and watching what some people consider "shlock". I've been told that a great deal of my favourite workout music was listed on someone's list of the Worst Songs Ever. I liked the Charlies' Angels movies (well, the first one). I sometimes really do prefer Kraft Dinner over a fancier meal. I like ABBA. I liked Titanic.

What the heck is so wrong with being "mainstream"? Of course it's good to not be a lemming, to be true to oneself. But y'know, I'm not going to pretend to like an eclectic artsy movie just because it's supposed to be Good if I truly don't like it, just to be seen as cool or chic or different.

When someone tells me a song I like is No. 1 on someone's Worst Songs Ever list, do they expect me to hit my head in amazement and exclaim, "Dear lord! Then I suddenly don't like this song after all!"

And if I come out of a so-called schlocky movie having thoroughly enjoyed myself and feeling great, who CARES if the critics hated it? I don't mind balanced discussion afterward (I know some of my friends didn't like the Lord of the Rings movies as much as I did, for example), but I get ticked off if someone aggressively tries to convince me that I shouldn't have enjoyed myself so much; it seems petty and sour grape-ish to me, somehow.

Sometimes I think people get so hung up over being different from the mainstream that they shortchange themselves, assuming that just because something's popular it becomes less worthy.

Ironically, being mainstream is so out-of-fashion these days that it's almost on the verge of being chic.

The thought of which makes my head hurt, so maybe I'll end my mini-rant here. Time for some more cold drugs, I think... (says Debbie brightly)

(By the way, although this Blathering was inspired by JeffK's comment in Blatherchat, it is not directed at him. I've been wanting to post on this topic for a while.)


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Tuesday
Apr122005

sideways elektra


Ice bubbles
Close-up of cottage ice, taken last month.



This bug I caught at FKO seems to trying to hang on with all its nasty little pestilent feet; I spent most of the weekend with the left side of my head plugged up, hugging a box of Kleenex. Finally seem to be shaking it, but I have a lot of catching up to do in writing and e-mail, hence the dearth of Blatherings.

Dragged myself out of bed yesterday because I was desperate for fresh air (when we move into our new house, I'll be able to go sit on OUR BACK DECK), rented Sideways and Elektra from Rogers Video down the street.

I enjoyed Sideways but found it a bit grim. Well, grim's not quite the right word; I'd rather not go into details for fear of spoilers. I can definitely see why the movie boosted California wine sales! And I'm in love with Sandra Oh.

As for Elektra...well, I'm still struggling to finish the movie before I have to return it. Yes, I had read the absymal reviews but I'm WEAK and COULD NOT RESIST (I'm a fan of the Elektra: Assassin series by Frank Miller and Bill Sienkiewicz). I liked Jennifer Garner much better in that Big copycat flick whose name currently escapes me; in Elektra, she just seems to be scowling all the time.

Thanks so much to David and Kathleen for the nose flutes!

42 days until we get possession of our new house.


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Friday
Apr082005

birthdays and bulgur!



Happy birthday to my pal Rand. For those who haven't seen it, here's a song that Urban Tapestry presented to Rand as a birthday gift a few years ago. I had really wanted to do this song at FKO, but sadly my tendinitis hasn't recovered enough for me to play the guitar part. Yay for Library Boys! (I'm sure Erin would agree ;-) )

According to LJ posts, it's also Chris O'Shea's and Simon Fairbourn's birthday today...happy birthday, all!

My FKO bug still hanging on, and now Jeff is sick, too. :-( It's one of those annoying bugs that doesn't knock you out enough to justify staying in bed all day, but still manages to inspire just enough misery to keep you from being able to focus on day-to-day tasks. Blecho.

BUT no bug is keeping me from being hugely excited about the fact that only 46 days remain until we get possession of OUR NEW HOUSE. I'm SO hyped. Whenever I even think about our new house, I feel stupid-happy. Can't wait. I know it will be at least a month of renovations before we can actually move in, but at least it will be OURS. I can walk in the front door ANY TIME I WANT. OUR front door.

(pause for hyperventilation to subside)

Anyway.

Despite cold-ickiness (washed my hands frequently), I cooked dinner for Jeff and his dad last night, two recipes from the Sofra cookbook, which focuses on Turkish and middle-Eastern cooking. I was especially happy with how the kisir turned out, a salad consisting of bulgur, chopped walnuts, hazelnuts, spring onions, green and red pepper, fresh parsley, mint & dill, dried crush chillies, paprika, cumin, white pepper, olive oil, lemon juice and tomato juice. Yummm. Lots of leftovers for lunches and snacks, too!

And now I'm hungry again. I'm so lame.

Have a great weekend, everyone.

<Woodcut mouse
Experiment with Corel Painter 8 woodcut effect.



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