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Showing posts with label YYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YYC. Show all posts
Saturday, 25 April 2015
365: Red; It's That Time of the Decade Again
Once every decade or so, our city's hockey team gets itself into the playoffs (this is Canada; we say it's not themselves - because a team is one thing... but I digress)
Last time was 2013 and it was all sorts of debauchery, public drunkenness, lots and lots of naked boobs - because beer plus normally self-respecting females apparently makes for "Sure you can post my naked breasts to Twitter/Instagram/Facebook, and I won't even regret it until I remember the Internet never forgets...
I like this sedate little display, even if it looks a bit like a wash line. I'm not at all sure about the blue and white stuffies...
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
365: Red; MechanoTree
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
365: Red; Leftovers
Last year, my friend, Rory (Aurora, actually) and I went down there and stripped as many apples as we could reach from the ground and by climbing. This year, I think both of us still have loads of the jelly we made, so we didn't pick and neither did anyone else. Even the birds didn't partake this year.
Labels:
apple tree,
Apples,
Calgary,
crabapples,
dried up apples,
old apples,
park,
red,
River Park,
spring,
winter,
YYC
Thursday, 26 March 2015
365: Red; Territorialism
Like, how do they know??
How do they know whether the trash in there has been deposited by a paying transit customer, or by some random passer-by?
How do they know whether the trash in there has been deposited by a paying transit customer, or by some random passer-by?
Thursday, 12 March 2015
365: Red; The Twenty-Year Tear Down
We moved into this neighbourhood in 1987. Here were the homes into which soldiers and their families usually moved on leaving the army. They are only a few blocks from where the MQs - the married quarters - used to be.
In 1998, Canadian Forces Base Calgary was closed, and pretty much everyone moved to Edmonton, leaving the MQs a virtual ghost town. Then people started renting those old houses on those tree-lines streets with sidewalks through the middle of the trees... and then Canada Lands took over. That's when everything started to change.
Our community used to be the other side of the tracks; people were middle class - barely. When we told people the community we lived in, they'd reply "Oh," with that "poor you," look. Once things in the MQs started to change, the whole area started to gentrify. House prices went from the $87,000 range to $1.5 million around here. Not even 20 years. Now, when we tell people where we live, we get that "Oh," except now it's with the "Oh, you rich people" face... except we live in exactly the same house still.
This house was at the end of the block just one north of us. We see something like this pretty much every day around here. Sometimes, I don't recognize my own street any more; we're the only stretch in this community with all original houses on it. For now.
Saturday, 14 February 2015
365: Red; Coffee, Coffee, everywhere
I don't remember when I shot this, but I remember where; outside a shop that sells all manner of electrical stuff, wire, wire cutters, light bulbs, stuff to fix stoves and ovens. It's a bits-and-bobs-lover's heaven.
When we were kids, our step dad travelled around Alberta and BC a lot, fixing things - GPS landing systems, I think - at small airports and landing strips. He always had a case full of electrical stuff, solder, and soldering irons. I remember rifling through that kit as we drove along, unsecured in the back of some old station wagon, singing Take Me Back to Albuquerque, from the Partridge Family show, until we made ourselves cry. Those were such simple days.
Labels:
abandoned,
Calgary,
coffee,
coffee cup,
red,
snow,
Tim Hortons,
Timmy Ho's,
YYC
Thursday, 27 March 2014
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