Early morning, Vancouver

Back to Vancouver from Sarnia last night via London (ON) to have lunch with my godparents who I have not seen in something like 10 years. That was lots of fun. The flights back, not so much. I am officially sick of airplanes… not that anything went wrong except being delayed 1 hour in Winnipeg airport where the sum total of fun available consists of drinking Tim Horton’s and watching airplanes take off and land on the runway. So instead of landing in Vancouver at a reasonable hour like 8:15pm, we did not land until 9:30 and then proceeded to wait another 45min before the first bags tumbled out on the baggage claim thingy. Then I couldn’t sleep for some reason, despite being crazy tired. A plus is that I love Air Canada’s new airplanes. They all have personal TVs on the back of the seat and you get to watch whatever movie you want, provided they have it. It was a pretty good selection and I had a tough time deciding. In the end I went with The Queen over Bon Cop, Bad Cop and The Rocket. I figure Dad might want to see the other two, so we can rent them sometime in the next month. Too bad it wasn’t a non-stop flight from London to Vancouver, I might have been able to squeeze two movies in!
Christmas and New Years was pretty fun. Spent the time in Sarnia hanging out with my family (Mum’s side – Montreal was Dad’s side) and it was the first time that my cousins and Jen and I have been together in ages. We are all within about 3.5-4 years of each other, so life is fun. I think I have now seen every single Firefly episode thanks to Lynne and some marathon sessions. In addition, the family has now been introduced to Bohnanza, the best game involving beans ever.
A kind person, my aunt and uncle, took up the many serious hints about wanting John Mayer’s album. Yay! It has been playing non-stop ever since I have been in contact with a CD player (ie since about 11pm last night). I think I almost know if off by heart now. My favourite tracks are “Stop This Train” and “Slow Dance in a Burning Room,” not because they are my favourite tracks to listen to but because they are one after the other on the album and the titles are funny in that order.
So now I’m back here for the next month or so until I start work in Victoria. Immediate tasks include laundry and visiting the library, not necessarily in that order. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be tackling my belongings in storage to do some reductions and find things I need for the boat.

United States

  1. New York
  2. Michigan
  3. Vermont
  4. New Hampshire
  5. Maine
  6. Connecticut
  7. Massechusettes
  8. Pennsylvania
  9. New Jersey
  10. Maryland
  11. Virginia
  12. Washington DC
  13. Ohio
  14. Minnesota
  15. North Dakota
  16. Montana
  17. Idaho
  18. Washington
  19. Oregon
  20. California
  21. Arizona
  22. Utah
  23. Nevada
  24. Wyoming
  25. Alaska
  26. Hawaii

Where I’ve Been

In rough order of visit:

  1. Canada
  2. Bermuda (1984)
  3. United States
  4. The Netherlands (1992, 2006, 2009)
  5. Japan (2002, 2008)
  6. Australia (2002, 2004)
  7. Cuba (2005)
  8. China (2006, 2008)
  9. Denmark (2006)
  10. Sweden (2006)
  11. Belguim (2006, 2009)
  12. Germany (2006)
  13. Czech Republic (2006)
  14. Austria (2006)
  15. Switzerland (2006)
  16. Lichtenstein (2006)
  17. France (2006)
  18. Monaco (2006)
  19. Ireland (2006)
  20. United Kingdom – England, Scotland, Wales (2006)
  21. French Polynesia – Marquesis (Hiva Oa, Nuka Hiva, Haupatoni), Tuamotus (Apitaki), Societies (Tahiti, Moorea, Huahine, Raiatea, Taaha, Bora Bora) (2007)
  22. Cook Islands – Rarotonga, Aitutaki, Palmerston (2007)
  23. Independant Samoa (2007)
  24. Kingdom of Tonga (2007)
  25. Fiji (2007)
  26. Vanuatu – Efete, Ambrym, Espiritu Santo (2007)
  27. Solomon Islands – Guadalcanal, Marovo Lagoon, Ghizo (2007)
  28. Papua New Guinea – New Britain, New Ireland, New Hannover, Duke of Yorks, Madang Provinces (2007-2008)
  29. Feterated States of Micronesia – Chuuk (2008)
  30. Guam (2008)
  31. Okinawa (technically part of Japan but it is pretty much in its own world; 2008)
  32. Midway Atoll (technically part of the US, but cool enough to be listed separate; 2008)
  33. Kenya (2009)

Happy Christmas

Well, one day before Christmas Eve. As you know, I’m in Montreal and this year is to be the first Hoyer Family Christmas in, well, ages. The last of the Hoyers arrive tomorrow evening (in the form of Dad and Colleen). It is pouring off and on right now in Montreal, so unless it drops 5-10 degrees or so and starts to snow (whilst making the roads hellish with ice), it looks like I’m in for a green and brown Christmas once again. Probably it will snow in Vancouver just to mock me.
I want to wish all of you a happy Christmas and I’ll talk to you again afterwards. To those of you going to Urbana, have a fantastic time and say hi to everyone who might know me – Steve B and the American team if you run into them.
Love to all.

en encore

Still here in Montreal. I`ve been able to re-go to some of the places I haven`t been to in ages and visit some new ones. As always, a visit to Montreal is not complete without a visit to Schwarz`s, so we had lunch there yesterday (thanks for the gift certificate dad!) after traipsing around Mont Royal for the better part of the morning. It is a little nippy out right now, but still no snow to speak of, although it did snow on Tuesday. Spent Tuesday up at “the Country” or the Laurentians where friends have a cottage. According to the guest book, I haven`t been there since 1997. I missed the last gatherings becuase of being in Australia. Things look pretty much the same I think, although I didn`t make it out to the fort or fort-area where Jen and I played as kids. No deer showing themselves either this time. It was fun to spend part of the day there again though. Tomorrow Jen is abandoning me in favour of work, so we are at the Library now where I am getting books to read. One can only spend so many hours wandering around Westmount. Sitting here typing, I am struck by how boring my life is now that I am not wandering Europe or China or not in school. Maybe I`m finally having a “normal” life. Oh, and on that note – I got a job in Victoria (much rejoicing and celebrating!). Not the one I interviewed for, although I was offered that one but had to turn them down. But I start working for SALTS in February, so I`ll be back and looking for a place to live in the not to distant future.

Welcome to Montreal

Where the sun is shining, it is nice and warm, and I get to hang out with my sister.
I’m sitting in the Music Library at McGill while Jen has her lesson. Tonight is a mini-concert of some sort – Jen’s teacher calls it a concert, Jen’s not convinced that is what it is. Either way, I get to hear her play recorder live for the first time in ages.
I think Montreal is the most “European feeling” city in Canada. It has the weather (right now anyway) and the buildings are (minus the sky-scrapers behind the heritage fronts) somewhat Parisian. I like it. Jen lives in an apartment across the street from Dawson College (of the September shootings fame) on Sherbrooke street. Pretty much as close to downtown as you can get without being downtown. She misses having a Westmount address by half a block. Just think, half a block from snobbery. Such is life.
After 3 weeks (give or take a few days) in France, and then a month of English-speaking countries, I am having to readjust to French again. However, France french is much easier for me to understand spoken. For some reason, it comes across much clearer to me. And then there is the slang and common words. I had gotten used to France and not using the Quebecois words I learned in school. D’accord is the word of choice in France. Everything is d’accordoui, d’accord. Oh, d’accord. D’accord, d’accord, d’accord. Here, they don’t say that so much. It is c’est ce. Except it is not pronounced like it supposed to be.
Last night, after I flew in, we went to see my god-sister, Hannah’s school play: La Foret Enchante (The Enchanted Forest). Hannah is 10 and was one of the narrators. Between the fact that the whole thing was in French spoken by pre-teens who either shouted or mumbled their lines (except random bits spoken by the bad guy in English… not sure if that is a language message) and it was quite an abstract/random plot, I really had no idea what was going on. I don’t think it had anything to do with Christmas or any other holiday for that matter. Oh well. Hannah did well, I understood that much!
And now, in random weirdness of my worlds colliding, tonight my cousin Lynne is having a movie night at my friend from Victoria, Tim’s house. Crazy.

In and Out

I got home from Ontario last Thursday. Frantically searched through boxes Friday morning until I found a pair of dress pants I could wear for my interview, then took the ferry over to Victoria Friday afternoon. Whew. Saturday was the interview, it went well, although may not need the job after all due to recent developments with SALTS (yay!). I got to hang out with Christine and Georgia (and Ruth a bit) who graciously let me sleep in their spare room on the thermarest! And I saw Robyn on the ferry and over home-made pizza and movies (Little Miss Sunshine is excellent!). Wait… there is more! I ran into Dave and Corinne in MEC… I hope you escaped alright Dave! And then saw Shareen fresh off appendix removal – I haven’t actually seen Shareen since she moved to Victoria. Crazy. Went to church on Sunday and saw everyone there. Miss organization, Megan, got 15 of us out to lunch where the conversation was anything but normal and then invited me to Scott and Holly’s for dinner and now I have finally seen, in person, the cuteness that is Kai! Holly, as soon as I find my USB cord, I’ll send you the video of him dancing! And then I’m back in Vancouver… and I leave again tomorrow for Montreal. I feel like I am still backpacking, except I’ve gone up in the world because I’m using suitcases now. This was sounding so much more interesting when I was composing it in my head. Oh well. Now I’m working on getting some photos developed. It is hard to whittle like 1500 photos into a manageable number that people will actually want to sit and look at. Not to mention that will fit in an album. I lost the album I was going to put them in, so that will have to wait for now…

Why I Love Canadian Airports

In the past 4 months, I have been to eleven airports (and am about to add about 3 more to that total this week) and fifteen countries (give or take). I’ve made some interesting observations about security… Granted, in Europe I was traveling with a Dutch passport so I didn’t have to worry about “non-EU” queues at borders, however, I think that there are some interesting things going on. Canada has not had a direct security threat on our airports (that I can think of), yet we are the most anal about security. Sort of. When checking in with WestJet, there is no need to show identification until I get to the gate. So I can check in, go through security, and sit in the boarding area without ever having shown identification. It is only if I try to get on an airplane that they will check and make sure I am me. We also have strict rules about liquids. My coffee mug was inspected (there was nothing in it at the time) and I was told to check my bag because I had deodorant which, apparently, might liquefy and pose a threat to national security – I was told that all liquids had to be in a clear plastic bag and they would not supply said bag. In London Heathrow, where they have had problems with airport security, they at least give me a clear plastic zip-lock bag to use. And they didn’t care about the deodorant. Beijing, Shanghai, Copenhagen, Brussels, Paris, Dublin, Chicago, Seattle, and Prince George (which certainly belongs on that illustrious list) don’t give a damn about what is in your carry on bag unless you have knives or something like that which you deserve to loose if you are stupid enough to bring on an airplane. So someone please explain to me this ginormous contradiction in Canadian security and why we are so stupid about it when no one else really cares? I’m sure I’ll have more to say on this later.