Sunday, 20 November 2016

Three weeks in...

and I'm wondering where the time has gone.

I've joined the local choir - Valley Winds Music Association - and we have some 80 singers. We're too big for the church now so tend to practice in the hall next door. It makes a nice change to have a good number of bass and tenor voices (about 30 men), as most choirs I have been a part of are mainly women. Our Christmas concert will be in Banff this year as we'll have the band playing with us too so need a big venue. It should be quite interesting!

I've also volunteered at ArtsPlace and have been putting up posters all over town for upcoming events. It gets me out of the house every day for a few hours and I've distributed about 80 out of the 100 posters so far. My legs don't know what's hit them as I've not walked this much for some time. The temperature has been quite variable over the last few weeks and it was great walking around town when it was 15C-18C but the last few days haven't been much above freezing and yesterday had a high of -5C. One of my friends commented that in a few months I'll be wishing for -5C (thanks Jonathan!) Think I'll need more layers!

And as for the baking, it has taken a bit of a backseat of late as Mark has had a few issues with tight ski clothing :-)

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

driving in canada

my first proper snowy drive up the sunshine village car park was ok, just a light dusting. But another couple of inches fell while I was up skiing which was enough to cover the 5 mile side road back to the trans Canada highway quite effectively, and its just busy enough for the traffic to compact the snow without clearing it. Took it slowly past the first car in the ditch, slower still through the flock of sheep or goats that had come down to eat the rocksalt/grit that they had spread on the road with no effect, and really slow past the Banff shuttle bus that was also in the ditch....

and at last i'm feel justified in spending that money on the all weather tyres.....

Monday, 7 November 2016

Here we go again


After summer in the deep south I thought I would never feel cold again. That came to an end today with my first day up on the sunshine village ski hill - technically only just below freezing but quite a strong wind so a bit of a chill factor.

Sunshine actually opened last Thursday - earliest in 31 years - but Maria banned me from going up and hurting myself before we went up to Churchill, so today is my first day on the hill, and Lake Louise is supposed to open this thursday.

Feet are screaming at me, legs are burning already and lungs are a bit shredded from the altitude, but it beats cycling around the village

Sunday, 6 November 2016

and proof they were not just stuffed....

follow this link - video was too big for blogger

Bad boy walking

and proof they were not just stuffed....

follow this link - video was too big for blogger

Licking sunshine off the rocks

Bear necessities

After years of saying we wanted to do it, we finally managed to get up to Churchill to see the bears.


Why Churchill?

Geography - Churchill sits on the southern end of the western coastline of Hudson Bay, so counter clockwise sea currents bring freezing cold water down from the North, where it meets fresh water coming out of the Churchill river and flowing north off the permafrost, so the ice forms there quicker and earlier than the rest of the bay. Hudson Bay is also less saline than the Atlantic due to being a bit disconnected and having all the fresh water flowing in, which makes it freeze more readily than the ocean, and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy as the ice then reduces evaporation so the salinity never rises.

Why Bears?

Because the bay freezes over so well, the ice lasts until July and the currents take the last of the ice to the south side of the bay, so the bears come off the ice onto land to the south east of Churchill and spend the summer on the tundra. According to the guides the bears spent 2 1/2 years as cubs with their mothers, so would have learnt where to go when, and also they can "smell the ice starting to form". My schoolboy chemistry and physics can't quite get my head around how ice can smell any different from the water it is formed from, and how they tell its sea ice rather than the fresh water lakes on top of the permafrost that also freeze over, but they know and start to head north west toward Churchill


What do they do?

Technically their main diet is ring seals, so most of them haven't eaten for 4 months since they last came off the ice, so they are hungry. We did see one sub-adult (maybe 4 years old) that was picking on the carcass of a cub that had been killed the day before, probably by another large male. Apparently its not uncommon for adult males to kill cubs both for food and to make the mothers mate again, but its the first time our guides had actually seen it happen. Not the nicest of thoughts but that's nature - cubs have about a 50% survival rate




We also found one big boy unenthusiastically picking on some washed up kelp. Speculation is that it may be for minerals, or to aid digestion, or from boredom, but whatever it is they don't seem that keen on the salad bar - sounds sensible to me.









And one very large bear eating snow and licking the rocks - again to aid digestion.







Apart from that they are basically trying to conserve energy by laying around and not doing much, especially as it was a warm day. Their fur is so dense and  so well insulated that water doesn't cool them down, so stretching out on some snow is the best they can get, and it takes 1/13th of the energy of walking around. They also don't like the wind on their noses (who does?) so tend to face away from the wind.










Exception to that is cubs are smaller so like the warmth of their mothers, so tend to bundle up with them.



And one for Johnmill....



Not going to argue the quality but definitely the biggest four by four by far. Firetruck axles, all custom built in Churchill, and I've not seen a landie with a balcony, khazi and propane stove built in, although I dare say someone has converted a 101 somewhere....

And yes, these are all Maria's photos. Well, they are a small selection of the 250+ she took, and video, but we saw all these ourselves - nothing is stock from the web.