Am I the only one in Calgary who doesn’t have cable TV?

Thursday, February 17, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I know that I am not literally the only person without vast channel selection. I know also that many people choose to have no TV. At many points in my life I have made the same choice.
Now I’m in between worlds, televisually speaking.
At the beginning of 2010, I cancelled our cable TV but kept the machine going on the analogue signal and the rabbit ears on top of the TV, with some tinfoil for an extra boost.
I get about three channels reliable. Sometimes to watch House and Lie to Me, I lie on the bed with my foot touching the end of the tinfoil, for better reception.
I got NetFlix and I like it, but it’s pooey to see how many things are on their list but greyed out with a “not available” message. Do other people get to watch those shows? Or does the whole NetFlix customer base get the bait and switch feeling?
The price is right, I like NetFlix, but why do they show us lists of things we can’t watch?
Anyway, with analogue TV and three channels, I pay attention to the TV listings. Bones, tonight, 10 p.m. Be there or be square.
Cold and snow. Breakfast Wednesday: Cora’s in MacKenzie, Calgary

Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
That picture of the shadow of the hawthorn tree is from Sunday. Today I noticed the shadow again, but since we’ve had light fluffy snow all day, the branches’ shadows look twice as thick.
Wednesday is Breakfast With Suzanne Day!
Today: Cora’s in MacKenzie Town. Or maybe that was just MacKenzie. And maybe it’s McKenzie. Anyway, if you live in Calgary, you know what Mac or McKenzie is. The restaurant isn’t obvious but it’s in the same little corner on 130th just east of Deerfoot as The Keg.
The food today: Bacon, scrambled eggs, fruit, blueberry crepes and a latte. Beans as an extra (for the protein, dear).
What we found out when it arrived is there was also toast and potatoes.
Enough food for a day, in other words.
Nice food. Atmosphere better than Ricky’s, not as relaxing as Over Easy, my current #1 pick. I think I prefer Nellie’s in the Loop to Cora’s for the #2 spot, but only by a whisker, and it’s only if we get the right table. For the food, Cora’s, for the atmosphere, Nellie’s, so take your pick.
We were at about plus 12 on the weekend. Minus 17 today with snow.
And unfortunately when I went for a grit refill, the box was empty. Oh no! May have to buy cat litter if we don’t get grit, for our sidewalk.
Some pictures from February in Calgary

Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Pictures from the past week or so.
There was more snow, though today a lot of it is gone, melted, lost.
We went over to the local arena. There’s something about arenas that makes people want to hang things from the ceiling.
I put my hat (toque) and mitts on the table and thought, maybe for posterity I should snap their picture.
On Wednesday, I went to a restaurant on Edmonton Trail called Over Easy, liked it. Here’s what I et and what the restaurant looked like.
Another day, I was down south doing some errands and saw some men working on the sign in front of a shopping centre. Not the job for me. Don’t like heights much.
That was during the week. Then on the weekend I had to do another little errand at South Centre. (Seems like the week before everything was at Market Mall, in the north.)
When I came out of South Centre, the parking lot was empty, the moon was shining, and the sky was a beautiful evening shade of blue.
Ideas for Calgary breakfast places to try?
Monday, February 14, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I’m not sure how much imagination I have when it comes to finding a new breakfast spot every week but I’m going to need ideas by Wednesday morning, and the Wednesday after that, and the Wednesday after that, as long as we can manage.
Need suggestions.
Should serve breakfast, not just an early lunch.
Must have good coffee.
That’s about it.
Ideas? Please?
Thanks!
Happy Valentine’s Day
Monday, February 14, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
When we were little kids in school, Valentine’s Day was such a big deal. First it was just the novelty and surprise of giving and getting these things, then it was a sense of relief when you actually got one (everyone in the class did, but there was always that element of suspense).
Then it was about boys and girls and who liked who, but only the girls were really promoters of that whole scene.
Big gap then suddenly the boyfriends are young men with jobs and the ability to pay for roses, dinner, a mortgage and somewhere in there, a wedding license.
Little babies come and so do pink fluffy toys, then those cute little Valentine’s cards that so amazed us with their novelty.
Our mayor’s trip to Toronto
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
One of the local news stories this past week was about our mayor going to Toronto and having a private firm pay for his trip. People tried to make hay out of the fact that the trip was paid for.
What I understand, based on no research, just listening to the radio, is that he was invited to go and give a speech. The people who invited him paid his expenses.
That seems quite acceptable to me, with one big caveat, and that is, we need to be clear on whether any elected people should accept invitations from the private sector, period, and what the rules for that should be. That is a discussion for another day.
The issue getting all the attention was, who paid for the trip to Toronto. Frankly that doesn’t concern me as much as who decides how the mayor should spend his time.
If going to Toronto and speaking at whatever venues he did is going to help the mayor advance Calgary’s interests in a meaningful way, then he was right to go. I would hope the decision to go was part of the mayor’s plan for Calgary, and that it advances a strategic objective.
Two or three days of the mayor’s time is very valuable. Was the trip worth the time?
This mayor seems to be an intelligent guy with common sense. I expect he determined it was in Calgary’s best interest that he go to Toronto and I’m optimistic that we got, or will get, some value out of that trip. Time will tell, I suppose.
One thing I’m sure of: a working trip to Toronto in February is hardly a boondoggle.
The mud! The car! The car wash!
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Here is a typical winter scenario in Calgary.
Snow. Thaw. Snow. Thaw. Snow. Thaw.
When the thaw comes, the snow melts, of course.
This creates two things: the risk of ice on sidewalks and other dangerous places as soon as the melted snow, now water, freezes again; and dirty cars.
The slush and water from the melted snow mix with whatever dirt is lying around to create thin mud soup. This is just the right viscosity for car tires to spray around, and so all the cars out on the road get coated with brown mud.
The weekend can be a very popular time to go to the car wash and rinse it off.
Surprisingly, when we went today, there was absolutely no line-up. Yay, it was done in 10 minutes and feels so much better now.
TGIF
Bizarre creation of a Christmas tree dump
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
OK, Christmas was almost two months ago. And yet, there is a stack of abandoned Christmas trees on the side of the road in a pull-through. Why? Because in years gone by, in the early weeks of January, the city has asked people to pile the trees there between stated dates. The city then took the trees away and ground them up for mulch. Excellent.
This year, the city did something different. They told us to put the Christmas trees out where the garbage goes, on certain stated days. They picked them up. They never whispered a thing about putting them in a big pile at the side of the road. They didn’t put up the little fences they had to mark where to put the trees last year. They didn’t put up a sign saying, “Christmas trees go here.” No, they told us what to do with the trees: leave them where the garbage goes.
Come on, people. You got the same notices I did. What are those trees doing at the side of the road?
I am open to hearing sensible explanations, but “Because they always did it” isn’t one.