Tag Archives: Postcard from home
06. Feb, 2011

Where steak comes from

Cattle liner
enclosed trailer for hauling cattle: silver with holes for ventilation

Cattle liner. Photo by Jill Browne, Calgary, February 4, 2011.

siler panel with holes cut out, the eye of a cow looking out from the dark

Cattle liner, close up. Photo by Jill Browne, February 4, 2011.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Took these pictures on Friday, driving down Blackfoot Trail.

I thought this cattle liner was empty because I couldn’t smell it and couldn’t hear any cattle. When I looked harder, I saw fur and then one cow looking out at me. All I could really make out, since it’s dark inside the trailer, was the cow’s eye.

In this picture, the eye actually looks sort of tame, but in real life it had that alarmed look cows get when anything upsets their ruminations.

It was a horrible moment, me thinking about how I happily eat beef (and enjoy it), while looking into the face of a helpless animal.

05. Feb, 2011

Grey sky. Looks more depressing than it is.

Winter sky on a snow day
foreground a dirty looking empty parking lot with snow; orange front of a big box hardware store in distance

A big hardware store and parking lot, Shawnessy, Calgary. Photo by Jill Browne, February 5, 2011.

big bright sunburst flare caused by camera, grey sky, shopping centre parking lot, empty shopping cart, dirty snow, grey winter day

Grey sky with snow lightly falling, Shawnessy, Calgary. Photo by Jill Browne, February 5, 2011.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

A colder day with light snow falling and a very grey sky. The camera flare exaggerates the sun; really it was just a dull yellow hole in an even duller sky.

I didn’t mean these pics to be depressing but they really don’t have much life to them!

We had to go out foraging for food and office supplies, thus ending up at this mall in Shawnessy. The mall is at MacLeod Trail and Highway 22X, but there is a lot more of Calgary even south of there. If you haven’t been here for a while you may be surprised at how much the city has expanded. This is the last shopping I can think of this far south on MacLeoad, though.

04. Feb, 2011

This is what sand looks like in Calgary (for the ice on our sidewalks)

Sand in my hand
low wooden box outdoors looking like a sandbox, with a sign saying residents can take sand for their sidewalks

Calgary provides free sand to residents in winter. Photo by Jill Browne, Calgary, February 4, 2011.

open hand holding some small gritty pebbles

What passes for sand in Calgary. Photo by Jill Browne. Calgary, February 4, 2011.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

It’s Melting! The snow is melting today, as the temp has been above zero (freezing) and sunny all day. This is my favourite weather, actually: from zero to ten degrees C, sunny and calm. Very uplifting.

But the melting snow turns to ice at night or when the daytime temp goes back down, as it will do again and again. We have to put “sand” on our sidewalk to prevent people from falling.

We get the sand free from the local fire station. It’s a help yourself arrangement, and there is a limit on how much you can take, but a pail full at a time is well within the limit.

Take a look at what we call “sand”. It’s angular grit! Gives good traction but a real irritation when a pebble hits your windshield.

Hey, should I apply for work as a hand model?

03. Feb, 2011

The Fish Creek Library looks like an Egyptian pyramid tonight

Calgary pyramid at night
night, dark sky, silhouette of a pyramid, and in foreground, a parking lot with vehicles

Calgary's Fish Creek Library looking like a pyramid at night. Photo by Jill Browne. Calgary, February 3, 2011.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

I didn’t go out looking for a picture of a pyramid today. As I walked across the parking lot, the silhouette of the library made it look like a classic Egyptian pyramid. This as Egypt is in the middle of turmoil.

Usually, this is just a library, and usually it looks silver. It is not a pure pyramid in shape. What you can’t see here is a kind of bisecting gash designed in the top one-third or so.

02. Feb, 2011

Our C-Train is going up into the air. Discuss.

Pumphouse Theatre sign

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Today is Groundhog Day. We haven’t got groundhogs and I’ve never heard of Prairie Dog Day, so nothing to report on the rodent meteorology front.

Another bright sunny day, even warmer than yesterday. Up to about 5 above zero, I think. Celsius.

The pictures I took yesterday of the new LRT and the downtown skyline show something of how parts of Calgary are getting high off the ground.

I remember being quite charmed the first time I encountered a quiet European tram at ground level. It was in Bremen, Germany. More recently, I had the horrible experience of driving in Toronto on the elevated expressway (not for the first time, it was just a particularly yucky ride). There is something so unbecomingly dominant about a road that puts cars above people, literally.

I like the new Vancouver rail line from the airport to downtown, and it’s elevated.

So, what’s the difference between the elevated car experience and the train experience? It must be the feeling of being about to be killed by other drivers that ruins the whole car thing for me. I feel safe in the train. I’m looking forward to riding the new C-Train when it’s ready.

01. Feb, 2011

Calgary’s West LRT under construction

LRT under construction
giant section of concrete train track under construction

Section of LRT just east of Crowchild. Photo by Jill Browne. Calgary, February 1, 2011.

foreground snow on road, blue sky, in distance massive section of bridge under construction

Calgary's new LRT under construction. Photo by Jill Browne. Calgary, February 1, 2011.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Beautiful sunny day! Started out at -25 C and reached -6 by evening.

Last week I was surprised to see how far along the building of the west leg of the LRT (our above-ground light rail transit) is. The chunk they are working on now is massive. I hope the pictures give at least some idea of the size.

31. Jan, 2011

Calgary’s Plus-15s make downtown easier. Thanks to Harold Hanen.

Plus 15, Calgary, by Jill Browne, January 31, 2011
Plus 15 walkway connecting two office towers 15 feet above ground level

Plus 15, by Jill Browne, Calgary, January 31, 2011.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

It’s about -25 Celsius today for the high. In Medicine Hat, where it gets quite hot in summer, it was -41 with wind chill this morning. (At 40 below, Fahrenheit and Celsius are the same: bloody cold).

I’m grateful to the late Harold Hanen, architect, who promoted the Plus-15 walkway concept here in Calgary, as part of trying to make us a “livable winter city”. As shown in the picture, the Plus-15s are walkways, 15 feet up in the air, connecting many of the downtown buildings. Admittedly, it can take quite a bit longer to go a few blocks via Plus-15, as compared to going outside, but for any distance, they’re great when the weather isn’t so nice.

There has been debate about these things since the idea first came up. “They’ll take away pedestrians from street level! Downtown will be dead!” is the gist of the anti-Plus-15 argument. (Here’s a recent Calgary Herald article about it.)

I beg to differ. Downtown is not dead; the pedestrian life is happening inside when the weather’s poor.

I also take exception to the point in the Calgary Herald article that the Bow building is somehow a better element of “livable winter city” design than the Plus-15.

The article says:

“Calgary planners are starting to think more about the entire year in their work. David Downs, a senior architect and the co-ordinator of urban design and heritage with the City of Calgary, points to The Bow tower under construction downtown as an example. It was designed to maximize sunlight year-round and was aligned to minimize the impact of winter winds. That makes it more energy-efficient, and cosier.”

The Bow building (and I will try not to get started on a rant here) may have its good points, but it is out of scale with the rest of downtown and casts a massive shadow. Shadows = cold. Not a nice thing to do to your neighbours in winter.

More Bow building rants on other days. For today, YAY Plus-15, and thank you, Harold.

30. Jan, 2011

Looks more like Christmas than Christmas

Snow in Calgary, January 30, 2011

Snow on the tree looks like a Christmas card. Photo by Jill Browne, Calgary, January 30, 2011.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The snow continued, though not all day and not as much. But for a little while today THE SUN CAME OUT and it was a beautiful sight.

I think I am getting cabin fever.

Will report on advancing hallucinations etc.

By the way, that lattice thing in front of the tree is almost 2 metres high. The snow is about (very approximately) 30 cm to 50 cm deep, depending where you stand. In other places, there’s almost none thanks to the shelter of the tree.

29. Jan, 2011

The big snowstorm of January 29, 2011

Snow, January 28, 2011, Calgary

Snow on a Calgary street. Photo by Jill Browne, Calgary, January 29, 2011.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The snow hit us in a calm and deliberate way. It has been falling steadily all day, but with next to no wind, and also nobody walking in it.

This is perfect, perfect snow. Light, fluffy, beautiful. I didn’t even mind shovelling it.

But a grey day.

In other news, the other day I saw the new LRT under construction near Crowchild. Massive! Want to get back and take some pictures. When the snow has stopped.

28. Jan, 2011

The coffee shop regulars

Friday, January 28, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Yeah, I go for coffee a lot. It’s my main social outlet. I rarely go out at night (too lazy), like to watch movies at home on NetFlix instead of going to the theatre, hate shopping, do like eating at restaurants, but the thing I do most is go for coffee.

So I know who goes to what coffee shops and when.

One of my regular spots has had a bit of a change in the regulars over the last ten years or so (hard to believe it’s been that long, but it has). Still, I see more men in there than women, at least, I see the same men more often than I see the same women.

The current crop are semi-retired guys. Earlier regulars include one very scared and nervous guy, and one stern looking guy who is actually very friendly and kind (gives his seat to a pregnant lady, that sort of thing).

The only woman regular (besides me) is a lady I haven’t seen for a while, and I think that’s for a good reason. She used to come in during her recovery from what must have been a horrid car accident. I hope she’s back at work now.

And for a while there was the nurse from abroad studying to get her Canadian credentials. I hope she made it and is working too. She seemed like the sort of caring person I would like to have should I ever need a nurse.

It’s just a daily human drama out there in Cow Town.