The Royal Tour to Canada – 2011

Last year I wrote about our nation’s National Anthem, O Canada to celebrate Canada Day.  Last year Queen Elizabeth was the visiting Royal on Parliament Hill.  This year her grandson, Prince William and his new bride, Catherine will visit Canada on their first official visit overseas.  Already the newlyweds have become more popular than, well…the Queen!

According to the Ottawa Citizen newspaper, “Heritage Minister James Moore predicted the royal visit (by Will and Kate) will break all records and pointed to the record-breaking 1,300 journalists accredited to cover the visit — compared with 848 who covered Queen Elizabeth’s most recent Canadian tour. And the number is still growing.”

Although they are predicting the young couple will attract more attention, and the estimated crowds of people who will want to catch a glimpse of them during their eight-day tour of our country will be decidedly more staggering than the crowds for the Queen last year, the cost to taxpayers will be less than half of the Queen’s visit.  Go figure.

Media has been quick to point out that the two young Royals are very savvy to working a crowd and using social media and the like to their advantage.  The Canadian Government has even set up a 2011 Royal Tour site complete with a Facebook page and Twitter account, and there is a greeting from Prince William on the front page:

Message from His Royal Highness The Duke of Cambridge

“Catherine and I are very much looking forward to our Tour of Canada.  We hope to be able to meet as many people as possible and to see as much of the extraordinary and diverse country as we can”, said The Duke of Cambridge. “I have wonderful memories from my last times in Canada, and as such we consider it a great privilege to have been invited to Canada for our first joint Tour.”

Now being a Calgarian, I am looking forward to their last stop on their tour.  Ottawa will get to see them first on Parliament Hill for the Canada Day celebrations on July 1st, but here in the Cowtown, we’ll get to see what they look like wearing jeans and ten-gallon cowboy hats at the Stampede Parade as they help kick off the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth – the Calgary Stampede!  I gotta admit that I can’t help getting that “Yahoo” type of feeling at the thought of them chowing down at one of the gazillion pancake breakfasts around town that are a Stampede tradition.  Wonder if Will will even try his hand at calf roping?  (OK now I’m being facetious 🙂  Unfortunately they’ll miss out on getting a little mud splattered up at them in the stands during the “chucks” – that’s Chuckwagon races to you easterners 🙂 but no doubt they will enjoy the western hospitality the short while they are in Calgary and as they leave our fair land, they will have plenty of Canadian memories to take with them back to England.

I don’t think I’ll be brave enough to tackle the parade crowds to get a glimpse of the young couple while here in Calgary, but there’s no denying that their visit is good for Canada, for the cities they will visit while on tour, and all eyes will be upon them and our Nation during their time with us.

It’s a great way to kick off Canada’s 144th Birthday celebrations!  Welcome to Canada, Will and Kate!  Yahoooooooo!

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He’s a Classic!

Today my husband, Charles celebrates another birthday.  I’ll let you do the math but the picture of the classic car here will give you a hint as to the year my husband was born.

My husband, a gentle-giant sort of a man, a terrific father, grandfather and of course the love of my life, likes to “gloss over” his birthdays.  He refuses to acknowledge that he is now considered “over the hill” and as some would say, “rolling down the other side”.  He was in such a state of denial when our daughter announced she was expecting our first grandbaby, but now he’s sort of accepted the “Grandpa” title with grace and is already planning for the countless hours they will one day spend together on their first car restoration project.  If you hadn’t guessed it, my husband LOVES cars!

I have stopped counting how many cars we have owned over these years of marriage.  Charles owned motorcycles and several cars before we were married and one of our first dates together was spent with me handing him wrenches as he pulled the transmission out of his Mercury Cyclone.  I must have been in love!

Over the years he’s restored several classic “muscle cars”…a Ford Mustang, a Dodge Charger, and most recently a Plymouth Valiant customized in a red and white Canadian theme, Maple Leaves and all!  Yep, my husband LOVES cars!

We’ve had Volkswagons, GMC’s, Fords, Chev’s, Dodges, Plymouths, Mercedes, Camaro and a Cadillac.  We’ve had trucks, sedans, coupes, vans, SUV’s and even a couple of tractors!  Not all at one time of course, but over the years.  My husband can tell you which ones were “lemons” and which ones weren’t.  He can tell you which ones were gas pigs and which ones weren’t.  He has a varied assortment of car parts “left over” from every car he has ever owned I’m sure and unbelievably to me, he can tell what part goes into what car.  He can fix any car, any make, any model and I can “bleed” the brakes on all of them 🙂 I have learned that “if you can’t beat ’em, you gotta join ’em” so I support his car hobby whole-heartedly and no one was as proud of him as I was when he won his first car trophy at a car show with his 1969 Dodge Charger.

So today, I want to honour my wonderful husband by posting some pictures just for him…oh and for any other car buffs out there!  Here are some classics cars for my “Classic” husband.  Love ya, honey!

 

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Winner – Canadian Christian Writer’s Award – Blog Series

As promised here is the reposting of my second winning article: “Even Though I Walk Through the Valley”.  I am still pinching myself after winning the Canadian Christian Writer’s Award in the Blog Series Category!  Thought I should also recognize those writers who were finalists with me!   Troy Dennis, Marcia Laycock, Violet Nesdoly, and Kimberley Payne.  I am so humbled and honoured to be numbered amongst these amazing writers.

“Even Though I Walk Through the Valley” – Canadian Christian Writer’s Award Winner – (Article in Blog Series)

One of the most beautiful places to visit is the Comox Valley in B.C.  My husband grew up there and we return year after year to spend time with his family.  Comox means “Place of Plenty” and the description is an apt one.  One of the most picturesque sites is overlooking the valley from the Back Road.  The view is spectacular with the mountains and glacier as the backdrop, the ocean to the left, and the green, fertile farmland below.  Certainly we Alberta landlubbers are drawn to the ocean, and we appreciate the mountains, but the valley is the heartbeat of Comox.  Locals shop in the “valley”, farm in the “valley”, go to school and work in the  “valley”.  The people may look to the hills and to the ocean, but they tend to do the majority of their living in the “valley”.

Driving around Comox, there are sights and sounds in the valley that overwhelm the senses.  From the cacophonic honks of Trumpeter Swans nesting in the lowlands to the shrill peal of Eagles circling overhead, not to mention the routine drone of air force planes taking off and landing at the Comox air base, it is a thrilling natural and unnatural orchestra of sound that emanates in and around the valley.  The gardens are plush, the farmland is fruitful.  Truly it is a peaceful place, if one only takes time to appreciate it.

When we think of valleys in life though, we do not associate them with beauty but with heartache.  Valleys are places to be avoided, or to walk through quickly.  Our sights are always set on the mountaintop experiences, never on the valleys.  Valleys are associated with suffering and grief.  “Vale of tears” is a phrase that refers to Earthly sorrows that are left behind when one enters heaven.   “Vale” means a valley or a dale.  The expression hearkens to the 23rd Psalm with reference to the “valley of the shadow of death”.  When we grieve, we are in a “dark valley”, when we rejoice we are “on top of the world”.

So let’s contrast the “top of the world” with the “valley” for a moment.  I have observed that when I am in the Comox Valley my eye is constantly drawn to Mount Washington.  I have been told that the skiing there is fantastic, and it is supposedly the second busiest winter recreation destination in B.C. just behind the Whistler/Blackcomb resort.  The thing is, despite having visited Comox for over thirty years, I have yet to visit Mount Washington.  I have been told that the view of the Comox Valley from Mount Washington is absolutely spectacular, which leads me to deduce that those who have been up to that mountain top spend a lot of time looking down at the valley.  So I can’t help getting a little philosophical here.  When we’re in the valley we look up, and when we’re on the mountain we look down.  Am I right?

As a Christian I have done that repeatedly.  In the valley I looked Up and when on the mountain I looked down.  How many times have I cried out to the Lord, “Help!  Get me out of this deep valley!  Rescue me!”  I don’t want to stay in the valley; I want to be on the mountain.  I have often mistaken the mountaintop experience as being closer to God somehow.  And yet some of the most beautiful encounters I’ve had with God have happened right there in the valley.

“Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me.”  I look up to God and I discover that He is right there in the valley with me and I am comforted.   I have also noticed that the times I am “on top of the world” a kind of self-sufficiency comes over me and I forget Who it was that guided me over all those rocky places as I climbed out of the valley.  The “rod and staff” are not as necessary at the top of the mountain and rather than feel closer to God I have a tendency to look longingly down because it was there in the valley that I feel the closest to Him.

It is not by accident that the Psalmist paints a word picture of the Good Shepherd leading His flock of sheep through a valley.  It was common practice then as it is now for a shepherd to guide his flock to prime grazing grounds.  The shepherd allowed the sheep to feed and quench their thirst in the streams there for a while and then would guide them up the slopes and over the rocky terrain to the next pasture ensuring that there was always an abundance of food for the herd.  But traveling from valley pasture to the next meant negotiating through narrow ravines or wadis, or journeying over rocky and dangerous terrain.  It required the sheep to not run ahead of the shepherd.  The shepherd was the guide, he determined the path and direction, to stray from the path could prove to be destructive for the sheep.  Likewise it was the shepherd who determined how long the sheep would stay in the valley.  Once he felt they had been sufficiently nourished, he would guide them on to the next pasture.  He would help the sheep traverse the slopes out of the valley but he would not linger long on the mountaintops because of the scarcity of food there for his sheep.  Although the sheep may have enjoyed the view from the mountain and preferred not to have to negotiate the rough terrain leading down to the next valley, the shepherd knew that it was in the valleys that he would be able to adequately feed and prepare his flock for the next journey ahead of them.

It is also interesting to note that the Psalmist says, “Even though I walk through the valley…”  It does not say, run, skip, jump or rush.  The journey from valley to valley for the sheep is not a time of running quickly through one just to get to the next pasture.   Time is spent being nourished and cared for by the shepherd at each destination for as long as the shepherd decides before moving on to the next pasture.  It is also not a place to stop and set up camp indefinitely.  Walk “through” the valley, means just that.  It is something to be experienced and then move on when the shepherd signals to move on.

My family and I are walking through one of those “valleys” right now.  Notice I say we’re “walking through“, we’re not rushing through it, nor are we going to camp here indefinitely.  We’re walking through, taking our time, being comforted by the Good Shepherd, and we’ll move on when He says move on.  Until such time, we will take nourishment from Him here in the valley, and though our eyes may stray to the mountain from time to time, we will find rest and comfort here for now.  “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not be in want.”

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