Friday, February 11, 2011

Winterlude

Get ready for a photo heavy post!

It is February and that means that Winterlude is on. From February 4 to 21 the Capital celebrates winter and all that you can do with it. The skateway is open all the way, and the snow kingdom is open.

Last weekend was the ice sculpting competition at Confederation Park. Sunday was too grey to go photograph ice sculptures, so we did not even try it. This weekend they are calling for possible above freezing temperatures, so detail may be lost if I wait to go see them. Confederation park is only a few blocks from my office, and it was pretty cold but nice and sunny today. So I put the extra sweater I keep at work on under my coat, and made my way to the park.


There were some major changes to the sculptures this year. Some were made of ice and other materials. At the entrance to the park there was also a tepee and a Mongolian yurt. I stuck my head in the tepee and the floor was covered with spruce branches. it smelled like a Christmas tree stand.

Tepee with the Lord Elgin hotel in the background.

Mongolian yurt. Inside there was some furniture painted like the door.

In an effort to preserve the sculptures for the entire Winterlude festival, some were covered with tarps, to keep the sun off during the day, but this lovely detailed piece was the first sculpture that wasn't.

The dragons and the pearl.

The sculptures are really set up to be seen at night, and led lights were installed at the base of most of them. A large group of sculptures were on display under a roofed gallery. Likely also to protect them from the sun, and have them last longer.  in past years they were just scattered around the park.

Spider lady

School of fish

Mermaids and fish.

Detail of a Veteran's Affairs sponsored tribute to women in the military.

Sculptor at work with his electric chainsaw.

There was music playing from a setup in the center. Among other things Great Big Sea with I's the b'y, and Ashley MacIsaac's Sleepy Maggy. Definitely an east coast theme to the music. And there was the heavenly smell of ribs, poutine and beaver tails. (No I didn't! A white winter coat combined with finger foods and big fat mittens is a disaster waiting to happen. A safe and boring lunch once back at the office, thank you.)

The "food court".

Old fashioned maple taffy stand

The sculptures look magnificent after dark all lit up by the coloured light. This photographer posted some gorgeous shots on flickr. Have a look at them, if you have the time. Some of the pieces really only work in the dark. I did not have the determination to stay down town late, when it is even colder to take (or ask "my" photographer to take) these pictures myself.


Sunday, February 6, 2011

Shoes! Snowshows

I like shoes, from my red embroidered summer flats,to my black dressy boots. This weekend I bought a pair of shoes with no aesthetic value whatsoever. What will I wear with them? Lets see.....long-johns among other things. And layers!

After last week's snowstorm there was finally enough snow to justify buying the snowshoes that I wanted to buy this winter. Saturday morning the temperature went suddenly just above freezing for the first time since about new-years, and Westboro Village, home to the Mountain Equipment Co-op, looked sunny and pretty. In the back of my mind I thought: "Murphy's law, I'll buy them and we'll have an unexpected thaw, and I won't be able to use them". Yeah, unlikely!

Inside there were many kinds of snowshoes, luckily there was friendly, knowledgeable staff to help me make the selection. I ended up with a pair of GV  "active winter trail" 9x30.

They look super high tech! They bear little resemblance to the traditional type you occasionally see on the walls in rustic little eateries. A carry bag was purchased for them, as well as a pair of long johns in the recommended moisture wicking micro-fiber rather than cotton, which will make you cold if you sweat. 

I tried them out today, and it is definitely work. First I have to suppress my tendency to point my feet outwards a bit, because with this size shoe that means the back ends will touch. Turning around requires active thinking about what you're doing, and if you forget to lift your feet out of the snow, you trip. I caught on to it pretty quick though. I went on the trail, but that was not very exciting, so I went off the trail and into deeper powder. You still sink in, but not nearly as far, and you can get pretty good speed.

This effectively makes most parks that were off limits in winter wholly accessible. No more excuse to stay inside now!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Groundhog day with a snowstorm.

Yesterday the news was filled with warnings of a coming snowstorm. The CBC website had details on the developing storm in the United States, and in one place they were apparently calling it the coming "snowmageddon". Western Ontario was set to be hit pretty hard as well, and we were also to get our share of a partially petered out storm. The usual reader comments to the story were posted on the CBC website. People from Saskatchewan and Alberta commented that this is their reality and we should all suck it up, etc etc etc. I can't really criticize this with a completely clear conscience. I'm the one who said that I would never watch a season of Survivor, unless they did a "Survivor Ellesmere Island". I just didn't think the tropics was really "roughing it". But I digress......

So, we left earlier for work today, and a few inches had already fallen since the early morning hours. I turned on the radio in the car, and to my surprise I discovered that it was groundhog day. We said: "already?", and then listened as the radio announcer launched into a review of the results that were known at 7 am. I thought he was going to mention Punxsatawney Phil, Wiarton Willy and maybe one or two more, but he kept going and going. I began to wonder, how many of these rodents with a job are there?

Wiarton Willy's statue

 We still got to work 25 minutes late, and when I mentioned groundhog day, my coworkers mostly also said: "already?" During the longer than usual drive in, we had heard all sorts of groundhog news on various stations, and the majority of them were predicting an early spring. After about an hour of groundhog indoctrination my curiosity was peaked. And this is why:

I can understand that we want some way to predict when winter will end. Give it two or three more weeks, and most of us will be mildly obsessed with the subject. And likely many years ago, pre radio, tv, internet,  winter was a lot duller. But how do you get from there to waking a hibernating rodent, and asking it when spring will come? How old is the farmer's almanac? (The usual paragon of long term weather prediction.)

So I did some research. The farmer's almanac goes back to 1818. Groundhog day is presumed to have been celebrated since sometime in the 18th century. It was begun as a Pennsylvania German custom that has its roots in European weather folklore. It seems that the original animal consulted in the "old country" was a bear or a badger. How it came to be like that in Europe is anyone's guess, that's why it is called folklore. Groundhog day coincides with Imbolc, a celebration of the coming of spring, in the Celtic calendar. Clearly, lots of people are obsessed with spring.

Badgers and bears both occur in North America, and both are cuddly from far and far from cuddly. The badger's size belies it's ferociousness. They have been known to take on coyotes and win. The grizzly or the black bear needs no introduction. So I can very clearly understand why the change to consulting a groundhog happened.

I can sort of imagine this conversation that took place at some point. "It's time to read the coming of spring, folks.  We think there's a grizzly asleep over there by that far hill, and there is a badger's burrow over there by the other hill, and .....oh...there's a groundhog burrow at the edge of my field. Which shall we wake up?"

I don't know.....let's meditate on it.

So, they brought a piece of tradition from home, and adjusted it a bit, and created a new festival in the process.  I do think they stacked the deck in their favour with the interpretation of the prediction. If the animal emerges from its burrow, and it is a sunny day, it will see its shadow, go back inside and back to sleep, and this means six more weeks of winter. If it comes out on a cloudy day, it does not see its shadow, does not go back in, and therefore predicts an early spring. And when do you really need to hear that there will be an early spring? That's right, on one of those gray, cloudy winter days. And you are more likely to handle the other news well on a nice sunny day. Genius!

It turns out that there are 22 groundhogs making predictions. Given the snowstorm, guess what most of them predicted today? An early spring! In reality we will get a minimum of six more weeks of winter, no matter what the rodent thinks.He can dream on.

As far as snowmageddon is concerned, Chicago did get hit pretty hard. We got a good snowfall, worth pulling out the extremely geriatric snowblower for,  and it is not over yet, but no one even thought of running to the store for candles or canned goods. We'll probably have another extended commute tomorrow, unless they clear and salt well.

Yeah, I'm dreaming.