Saturday, August 19, 2023

Northwestern Cultures

Northwestern Canada is a beautiful place with many distinct cultural contributions. Let's summarize via the totem pole. The totem pole represents the family heritage and story for people in the Haida and other First Nations people. (Shown here with bald eagle).
After coming to Canada and killing a large percentage of the local population with weapons and smallpox, the colonials then went into cultural wipe-out mode, leading to the burning of totem poles, deforestation, and of course abducting children.
But the strong Haida people are working on a renaissance, by relearning their traditional arts and reinvigorating the traditional culture. The first modern totem pole was raised in Port Masset, Haida Gwaii in the 70s, and now you can see then all around town.
As I learnt more, I became a particular fan of the Shame Totem Pole (here, see Types). So basically, you can commemorate forever the ways people have affronted you. And you can keep adding sections! This is amazing; Barry's Shame Poll is in progress.
The native people also revere nature and animals, so this Balance Rock is a cool and also spiritual place.
There are many native, foraged, picked foods, but it's hard to experience them in such rural places. We bought this bag of sea asparagus from a family of Filipinos selling it at a stall. Salty, crunchy, and high fiber - a great snack! (Does not taste like asparagus).
In Whitehorse, Yukon, there are many traces of the goldrush culture. I didn't realize that the wild wild North looked like this.
We went to Carcross, short for Caribou crossing, where the small goldrushy houses/huts still exist, many inhabited. The one below was built by a man who loved the beer parlour and his dream was to put wood on his fire from his bed. His dream was NOT to stand up in his hut, which is sized for an 8-year-old, shown here.
Prince Rupert, where we saw the aforeblogged bears, is a port and fishing town. Of course, they revere the mighty beaver.
We think these are dungeness crab traps. They were everywhere.
Prince Rupert has (sort of) converted their old salmon cannery into a museum. There, Chinese, Japanese, Native and White workers did different jobs, lived separately in highly different standards, and canned salmon. Fascinating, yet the anthropological commentary skirted some of the more difficult issues here.
Of course everywhere had a fishing culture, and everywhere had beaches of many kinds. Here is our fave. BC beaches are mostly covered in logs! Some is from logging boats being clumsy, some is regular driftwood, some is really old and historical, apparently.
This was a creepy inland log graveyard. I'm not sure how logs get into a marsh. I would guess a logged area that has flooded?
There will be no LIS Beachliness reviews, because the vast majority of Canada's beaches will have the same review as lake Erie. Beautiful, desolate, often cold, limited facilities.
But definitely very beautiful.
Final cultural picture. We accidentally rented a purple car onto which ladies may pose. Here is my best work. No, the bumper scratches were not ours.

Monday, August 14, 2023

Grizzly Times

Well hello there, just a grizzly beear eating tasty high-protein sedge grass.
As you can see, we clearly need to fatten up before the winter hibernation.
Looking pretty cute with the claws and the fuzziness.
Also digging for shellfish on the beach.
Above is the best picture of the baby cub. If you think about it, you don't want to get too close to grizzlies, so this is good enough.
A good way to see these grizzlies is from a boat in the Khutzeymateen Park, which is a bear sanctuary. From a boat, you don't bother the bears, and incidentally they don't bother you.
I'm not good with boats, but I managed. Here is our boat selfie.
Anyway, there were scarier animals in the forest too. I learnt that British Columbia has big slugs!
And we also saw more traditional BC animals.
Finally, in the Yukon I learnt what a fish ladder was. Here is a climbing fish. They still have to work hard, even on the escalatorish system. It's like fish engineering.

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Canadian Reflections

Fun fact: Canada has the most lakes of any country
Funner fact: Canada has more lakes than all of the other countries combined. Suckers.
Funnest math: to share these lakes evenly, you can have 48.5 people per lake. Not bad. Pretty private.
I got really into lake reflecty shots. Where does forest end, and water begin?
This might be a river. It had otters, but no beavers.
Then I got the best reflecty picture of all time. We had to turn around and walk along the highway to take this because I was freaking out about the boat in the sky look. (The fog enables this illusion.)
Then we went to the Yukon, which is gloriously beautiful. I had no idea. I thought it was just all northy snowy times.
Look at these waters!
This is emerald lake, which is green from marl, which is a cool way of saying calcium deposits eroded by glaciers.

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Nocturnal visitors

Barry's parents visited, so we showed them the nightlife of Singapore. First step, accessing a speakeasy
Second step, delectable Sichuan fusion food.Then it's time to go out searching for life. We looked like this.The katydid showed her googly-eye surprise.We found various snakes, but they hid their faces to be shy. Here, shore pit viper.And here, oriental whipsnake.
See if you can spot the monitor lizard dozing in here.
Singapore's mangroves have tree crabs, and I am still entertained by crabs in trees.
Mycena chlorophos, another species of bioluminescent mushroom, which, of course, doesn't photograph easily.
But the star of the show is the colugo, photographed by Barry's mom's fancy camera.
Hello there! Your orange mini-ears really bring out the strange un-mammalian green of your fur!
This one had a surprise for us, a baby!
Speaking of un-mammalian, did you know that the mother colugo wraps her patagium and tail around the baby to form a comfy protective baby quasipouch? You can use this in your next trivia night.
Thank you Lucy for all of these photos!