Welcome to my Blog

Welcome to my Blog

I created this space to post my thoughts and photos. It began in 2012 with my travels to New Zealand, Tasmania and living and studying in Australia then continued back to Canada with my return home to Edmonton and moving to Victoria, British Columbia. Join me on the journey. Post a comment!

Friday, 20 December 2019

The Emerald Isle

I am trying to catch up on my posts before the end of the year and decade.
In October I had the good fortune to travel to Ireland for work and squeeze in some sightseeing.
It was an amazing 10 days!
No kidding, I saw the most brilliant rainbow I'd ever seen in my life and although I found no Leprechaun or Pot of Gold I felt like I hit the jackpot.
Here are some of the places I enjoyed.
Larger than life Oscar Wilde in Merrion Square, Dublin
Trinity College, Dublin






The Book of Kells, Trinity College
The immense and majestic Library, Trinity College


The Palace Bar, Dublin where famous writers gathered

Rolling hills and sheep everywhere
Bective Abbey, one of the many Abbeys, Monasteries and Castles I saw

Newgrange, a passage tomb, older than the Pyramids and Stonehenge

Charles Fort, Kinsale protected Ireland from invaders from the south


Cunard Steamship Line, Cobv, last stop of the Titanic and thousands of Irish Emigrants

One of the many stories of the Blarney Stone - all Blarney! 

The mirror like Lee River, Cork
Guinness - a meal in a glass. The cider was pretty good too! 

I'm not a Whiskey drinker so enjoyed a wide choice of gins

Friday, 6 December 2019

Never forget


Thirty years ago today, on Dec. 6, 1989, a gunman walked into École Polytechnique de Montréal and killed 14 women. During the rampage, the man, who had failed to gain admission to the university, shouted, "You're all a bunch of feminists and I hate feminists!"

I was sitting in the basement of my home with my two young daughters who were 1 and 3 years old, when the news came over the television. This was a brutal, targeted mass shooting. In Edmonton, where we Iived, it was a cold, dark wintry night which became even colder and darker as I sat terrified and shocked.


This was the first school shooting (so many more have followed in the US) and I was horrified that a safe, educational environment filled with young, vibrant students was turned into a killing place. 


All but two of those women were studying to be engineers. I had a Master’s Degree and considered myself a feminist. I wanted even more opportunities than I had for my daughters.


Today my daughters are well educated and successful women in careers they chose.  They are married to supportive, educated and enlightened men.  


Yes, there is still pay inequity, women (and men) who feel marginalized in the workforce, domestic violence, women being murdered. I pray we are on a positive track forward and hope with all my hope this horror never happens again in Canada or anywhere in the world.  


I always mark this day with remembrance which today took the form of asking the people at the start of a meeting to share their memories.  Everyone in the room had a story.  

I shall never forget the 14 women who died and by doing so I will do what I can to not let it happen again.