Weekend family fun – the Simply Raw Festival

You know how some friends are more like sisters than friends? My friend Candice is like that. She’s been with me for the worst of times (she was the person I called when we got our infertility diagnosis) and the best of times (she was in the room when Tristan was born.)

Candice is also the best cook I know, bar none. She blogs about her adventures with food at Kitchen Mambo, and she’s the one who introduced me to the concept of raw food. Heard of it? At first, I thought eating raw meant eating a lot of carrots and celery, but it’s so much more than that. Eating raw means your food is vegan based (no meat, no dairy — only food from plants) and uncooked and unprocessed, but not necessarily in its original form. In addition to some spectacular salads, I’ve had raw crackers and raw pizza dough at Candice’s place — delicious!

It seems like more effort than I’m currently willing to put into my diet — after all, I’m a girl who has quite recently graduating from simply heating frozen entrees to actually cooking food — but I’m intrigued by the idea. I’m hoping to check out the Simply Raw Festival going on this Saturday in Central Park. From their website:

This year’s Simply Raw festival aims to promote healthy lifestyles through raw vegan food and active living. Our famous raw vegan pie contest will be back for another rawsome year, and the event will also feature a range of seminars on healthy living topics by a number of celebrated speakers from across North America. [It will] bring together local and regional businesses and organizations with healthy living as the core value of their mission, and a range of other exciting activities and events throughout the day.

The highlight of the event is a raw vegan pie contest Participants create desserts using only fresh plant foods, with no cooking allowed. The entries are then judged by local community figures, including Jim Watson, Ron Eade, Paul Dewar, Tony Greco, Robert Fife, and others. The festival also includes about 40-50 exhibitors, including raw food vendors, and organizations and businesses promoting eco-friendly healthy lifestyles.

On censorship and potty talk

How can you not roll your eyes at this story?

Apparently, Ottawa author Kevin Bolger, who wrote a kids’ book with the snicker-worthy title of Sir Fartsalot Hunts the Booger, was stopped a few minutes into his reading at an Ottawa elementary school yesterday and pulled aside by the principal, who then canceled the rest of the reading entirely. According to the school board superintendent, “the principal was concerned about a character in the new book called ‘Mrs. Imavitch’, which rhymes with a derogatory word.”

The superintendent went on to say, “[The principal] was a little concerned about what might be interpreted by the kids of the language. They’ve been working hard this year on their character initiative … [on] respectful language to one another. She just felt that with the age range of the kids it was better that they not discuss that today until they could put the whole thing in context.”

Seriously? I mean, for one thing, the first thing that comes to my mind when I think of words that rhyme with “Imavitch” starts with a W, not a B. And for goodness sake, the school didn’t get the hint that there be potty humour ahead when they signed on for a book reading that had both farts AND boogers in the title?

Okay, so I’m biased. In a house with three boys ranging from two to eight years of age, I have come to realize that there is no higher art form to a young boy than a well-worded fart joke. You should hear them howling with laughter when Beloved reads them Captain Underpants, or even the How to Train Your Dragon series. It’s the sweetest sound in the world, and it makes them love books even more. I say, if it gets them reading, I’m fine with a little potty humour here and there.

CBC.ca notes that Kevin Bolger is scheduled to read at seven more Ottawa schools on his current reading tour. I only wish our boys were lucky enough to go to one of those schools, and I dearly hope the next seven schools show more sense than the administrators at Manor Park Public School did. Lighten up, people! A little silliness is a wonderful thing.

What do you think?

Blog Out Loud Ottawa – the 2010 edition!

It’s coming!


Blog Out Loud - July 7, 2010

Just three weeks remain until BOLO 2010, Ottawa’s most fun bloggy meet-up. What is BOLO? In the words of BOLO’s irrepressible and endlessly creative founder, Lynn of Turtlehead, “Blog Out Loud is an Ottawa-based get-together for bloggers, lurkers, and anyone who likes to hear good writing.” And starting today, Lynn is teasing us with a day-by-day reveal of this year’s readers, each of whom will read a favourite blog post from the last year. Local photographers will also have some of their work on display.

Want to come out for a night of bloggy good fun, friends and festivizing? BOLO 2010 will be held on July 7 at Irene’s Pub on Bank Street, starting at 7 pm. If you’re feeling especially brave, I hear Lynn is still looking for a few good men and women to fill up the last few reading spots, and she’s also looking for volunteers to help out that night.

See you there!

Calypso Water Park one-word review: Wheeeeeeeeeeee!

How do you earn yourself a million ‘cool parent’ points? Pull your kids from school on a Friday in mid-June, thumb your nose at the deteriorating weather forecast and predicted highs of a measly 22C, and head out with friends for a day at Calypso, Ottawa’s brand new waterslide park!!

Bucket dump!

After a half-hour wait at the gate (they weren’t expecting crowds that really didn’t seem to unwieldy to me) we finally made our way in, and we hadn’t even chosen a base to drop our towels when Lucas tripped and scraped both knees on the pavement. Sigh. It seemed to knock him out of sorts, and it took a lot of coaxing to finally get him into the water. The big boys, on the other hand, took off into the bowels of the Pirate’s Aquaplay with barely a backward glance!

Pirate splash pad

Eventually, Lucas warmed up to the various gizmos, hoses and levers in the toddler splash pool. (Ha, I didn’t even notice until I went to post this pic that it’s the only one I got of all four of them all day — Beloved and Lucas in the foreground and the big boys spraying each other with hoses in the background!)

Lucas and Daddy

So here’s the thing. I’d been a little anxious about the weather all week as we planned for this trip. I am a wimp, and I don’t like to be cold. I’ve been at Mont Cascades on a steaming hot day in July and found myself gasping with dismay at the frigid water temperatures. I was pleasantly surprised at how warm the toddler pool was, but I can’t tell you how wonderful it was when we found out that the GINORMOUS wave pool was heated, too!

Giant wave pool

The waves were wicked strong, and I’m glad the park provided life jackets. Tristan is a strong swimmer, but Simon’s only moderate, and though he fussed about being in a life jacket, I felt safer letting him play in one. There are a lot of lifeguards on duty, but it was still another patron who managed to get to him first (and no lifeguards seemed to notice) when he lost his footing and the undertow pulled him out of his comfort zone before I could get to him.

Speaking of currents, I think my favourite part of the park is the Jungle River, a long canal that loops through the middle of the park with a very quick current that sends you bobbing along whether you want to move or not. You can ride the current with a mat or just swim, but you’ll have to work hard against the current if you want to stand still. It brings you through misty caverns and under waterfalls — a blast! And again, warm water!!

Tristan shark

You know, I think the boys at 2, 6 and 8 may be at a perfect age for the water park right now. We played for more than four hours in the toddler pool, the Pirate splash pad, the lazy river and the wave pool, and nobody was bored or impatient or wanting to do one thing while the rest of the crew wanted to do something else. The big boys were quite happy to play in the toddler pool with Lucas, even if Tristan is officially about half an inch too tall for it. (The perils of large children!)

Lucas in the toddler pool

Simon and I ventured onto the big waterslides. I really, really wanted to try the one that flings you out of the tube and 90 degrees up a wall before letting gravity drag you back down again. Simon, who is my least daring child most days, surprised me by being the daredevil of the day. And because the day was cool and a school day, we didn’t have to wait in line — my aching quadriceps will tell you how quickly we mounted the many, many (many!) stairs in quick succession. We got to the top of the slide before either of us had the chance to chicken out, and it was so much fun that we immediately headed back up the stairs for a different run. And then, we headed back to the toddler pool.

Soaking Simon

The kids surprised me again and again throughout the day, playing against their usual personalities. Lucas was out of sorts to start the day, and reluctant to even get into the water. Simon, who is the more cautious and sensible of the three, was limitless in his energy and enthusiasm. And Tristan, who usually has boundless energy, was the first one to peter out and want to dry off and change. Go figure. Oh well, they still had a great time.

Lucas in the water

In all, we had a fantastic day. The water, warm and salty, was perfectly comfortable despite the coolish day and more-often-than-not clouds. The park seemed a little understaffed and the lines moved very slowly for tickets and concessions, but the place felt spacious and uncrowded in the pools and slides. We arrived for park opening at 10 am, and stayed for about four hours, giving us lots of time to feel we’d had a day out without giving up the toddler nap altogether. We brought a few snacks, but bought lunch at one of the handful of small restaurants and snack bars. Next time, I think we’ll just pack a picnic — no lineups, and no pogo temptations! There are tonnes of picnic tables with umbrellas throughout the park — we didn’t even unfurl our blanket.

If you can go before school lets out for the summer, I suggest you do, and if you can’t go early, make sure you go at least once this summer. It’s worth every penny!

Jumping for Calypso

We’ll be going back for sure – maybe more than once!

P.S. For more pix, you can check out my set on Flickr or Lise’s — and I’m betting Angela might have a few more by end of day, too. 🙂 I left my Nikon at home and brought the point-and-shoot, then spent the whole day with lens envy watching those two shoot!

If you go:
Calypso Water Park
2015 Calypso Rd in Limoges (Exit 79 from the 417)
Admission $30 for adults and kids taller than 1.32m; $24 for kids under 1.32; kids under two years old free
$5 for parking
Restaurants and gift boutiques on site

A new Flickr group for Ottawa photographers and dilettantes like me!

While I’ve been on Flickr for more than five years, it was only in the last year or two that I really started participating in the social side of the medium, posting my photos to groups and participating in group discussions.

I’ve learned so much about photography, but I like to think I’ve also learned just a little bit about what it takes to run a group that’s helpful and welcoming and a fun place to hang out online. Lofty goals, but with a co-admin like Angela, aka jhscrapmom, I think we’re up to the task!

So please, if you’re in the Ottawa area and you take pictures, or like pictures, or like to hang around with peeps from Ottawa who take (or like!) pictures, come and play with us in the Postively Ottawa group.

Positively Ottawa

a group to share your ottawa and ottawa area photos
a group to share your photos if you are an ottawa area photographer
a group to share your ottawa blogs
a group to share your ottawa experiences
a group to share your photographic experience
a group to learn from
a group to ask questions in
a group to positively participate in

and in the spirit of positivity we welcome photographers from beginner to professional!

we play nice here. promise.
and we follow all flickr guidelines. we are funny like that.
this is a family friendly group, please moderate your photos accordingly.

Cuz, yanno, I don’t spend enough hours in the day with either a keyboard attached to my hands or a camera stuck to my face. *grin* And speaking of pictures, here’s my own favourite of the week.

449:1000 Yoshiback ride

A keeper, for sure, don’t you think? Now come and join our group — you know you want to!!

Calypso water park sneak peek and giveaway!!

Are you ready? Less than 50 days remain until Ottawa’s hottest summer ticket opens: the Calypso Water Park east of Ottawa near Limoges. We’ve been waiting (im)patiently for more than two years for this park to open — did you know it will be Canada’s largest water park? And on a warm day late in April, I got a special sneak peek of the park to share with you!

436:1000 Calypso tour - Pirate's Aquaplay TtV

I was excited when I heard a new water park was coming, but honestly? I had no idea it would be this awesome. It’s not just a couple of waterslides — it’s really a giant water theme park, with more than 35 waterslides, separate toddler and kiddie play areas, Canada’s largest wave pool, a whole bunch of places to eat — it’s truly amazing.

From a recent Citizen article:

When the park opens, visitors will find 80-foot long extreme-style waterslides, a half-kilometre jungle river winding past a 52,000-square-foot wave pool, a beach, restaurants, shops, splash pads and pools for toddlers, and enough picnic tables and green space for 12,000 visitors a day. Calypso’s millions of litres of water will be kept at a constant 27 C and filtered every 90 minutes — every 30 minutes in toddler areas.

Calypso is located to the east of the city right off the 417, in the town of Limoges. It was a little less than an hour’s drive from Barrhaven. This is the front entrance, just getting its last touches of paint before the grand opening in six weeks.

Calypso tour - front gate

The park is enormous. The parking lot alone has capacity for 3,000 cars, and if I remember correctly, the park itself has a capacity for something like 15,000 people. You enter through a lovely little “main street” type area with a few different types of restaurants (from a cafeteria to an ice cream shop to a more formal sit-down dinner kind of place) and a souvenir shop. The water attractions are arrayed in well-spaced clusters around the grounds, with vast amounts of green space and picnic tables in between.

Moving clockwise through the park, the first cluster of slides is the Zoomerang, the Black Hole and Turbulence. “Thrilling rides with steep chutes, 360 degree curves in total darkness!” promises the park flyer.

Calypso tour - Zoomerang, Black Hole and Turbulence

Next is this giant water playground, the Pirate’s Aquaplay. It has tamer slides for smaller riders, and fun things like water cannons. The giant bucket at the top fills and dumps every few minutes. Perfect for the 5 to 10 year old crowd, I’d say.

Calypso tour - Pirate's Aquaplay

And for the littlest park visitors, there is a toddler park called the Zoo Lagoon.

Calypso tour - Zoo Lagoon

Calypso tour - Zoo Lagoon TtV

This will give you an idea of the scope of the park. I’ve just stepped away from the Zoo Lagoon, and turned my camera to the next cluster of slides. You can see the steep drop of the Fast Track on the left, the Boomerango and the White Water Extreme in the far middle, the Jungle Run river-raft ride in the foreground and the Turbo Lab at the far right. Behind me is the Pirate Aquaplay area for the kiddies, and the super-giant Calypso Palace wave pool is beside the Turbo Lab, with the entrance and "main street" bistro and restaurant area off camera to my right.

Calypso tour - Jungle Run

It’s HUGE!!!

I’m sure there is a perfectly good reason they’ve named this cluster of slides the Fast Track, Adrenaline and Vertigo. Not for the faint of heart! I think they should have called that skinny one with the near-freefall vertical drop “the Wedgie”. Yikes!

Calypso tour - The Fast Track, Adrenaline and Vertigo

This one of the Boomerango and the White Water Extreme is a shade out of focus (sorry about that!) but I wanted to show you what looks like a wicked-fun ending to the slide. You come flying out of the yellow Boomerango slide and it flings you up the blue and yellow striped wall until gravity yanks you back down again. Wheeeeeee!

Calypso tour - Boomerango

And yes, that’s a motorized lift, but only for the rafts. Your quads will get a workout when you visit the Calypso water park with all those stairs to climb!!

I didn’t get a good picture of the giant Calypso Palace wave pool, but it’s the size of three NHL rinks. There’s nothing rinky-dink about this park! Apparently it will be Canada’s largest wave pool (appropriate, considering this will be Canada’s largest water park!) and will have five different types of waves. And it’s good for all ages, as the depth starts at nothing and slopes gradually down.

I was impressed by every single facet of this park. From small details to big thrills, they’ve got a lot to offer. There’s a really neat biometric payment system described in the Citizen article:

One innovation […] will allow visitors to make purchases at restaurants or other facilities without having to carry money or cards. All they need is their fingerprint. If they choose, a person can put funds into an account at the park, either with cash, credit card, or debit card, and then have a fingerprint recorded electronically. Then, all that is needed to make any type of purchase in the park is to have the fingerprint scanned again to access the account.

Isn’t that brilliant? So you don’t have to carry your purse or wallet around with you or have someone watching it at all times. Hmmm, wonder if they could do that with my camera equipment?! And, you can bring your own picnic basket and blankets into the park, as long as you don’t bring any glass containers. I love that!

So the sneak peek was a lot of fun for me — thank you to the media relations director at Calypso for making me feel like a respectable journalist. And guess what? I’ve got two free day passes to give away to you! I was going to give them away as a pair, but I think I’ll split them up to spread the love around. (Actually, I was thinking of making you take me if you’re the winner! Am I allowed to enter my own draw?!)

Edited to add: sorry, the draw has ended, but if you’re looking for more ideas on great places to visit and things to do in Ottawa, check my “Ottawa Family Fun” archives! Or, you can read about our first visit to Calypso water park the very week it opened — so much fun!!

And if you’re wondering what’s up with the pictures with the black frame and the distortion — that’s “through the viewfinder” photography. The images are taken with my digital SLR camera, but through the viewfinder (ttv) of a 50-year-old Kodak Duaflex camera. Interested in knowing more? Check out this TtV tutorial!

The Kids in the Capital ABC Photo Challenge

So you know I love the subject of family fun in Ottawa, and you know I love photography, and you know I love taking pictures of my kids doing fun things around Ottawa, right?

Then how could I not love the ABC Challenge that GlidingLara introduced on their awesome new group blog, Kids in the Capital. The blog itself is terrific, a constantly-updated source of ideas and entertainment for family fun in Ottawa.

And the ABC Challenge is right up my alley. Lara said,

In the next 14 weeks I will get at least one photo I am proud of in each of the categories (in no particular order) in my following ABC list. Every week I will present you with 2 of the photos (hmmm, maybe photos from two categories so I can show you more if I feel like it), as well as a photography tip I have discovered that I can share with you. […] And I would love it if you would join me! I set up a flickr group where we can all share our photos with each other. Together we can not only share our beautiful photos but highlight some of the amazing spots in our fabulous city, from all its different angles.

Here’s the official ABC list:

Art
Books
Climbing
Discovery
Eating
Friends
Green
Hugging
Inside
Jumping
Kisses
Laughing
Mealtime
Night
Outside
Playing
Quiet
Riding
Swinging
Trees
Umbrella
Vehicles
Wet
Xcited (OH! Cheater!)
Yellow
Zoom

Fun, eh? I like this idea so much, in fact, that I’m having a hard time restraining myself. I mean, I could fill an entire blog with pictures of kids on the loose in Ottawa — oh wait, I already have!! So you need to join this group and help dilute my presence there, okay? 😉

I’ve already spammed the pool with entries for Friends and Wet based on my adventures with Alex and Angela this week. This is one is for F is for Friends:

Beach Buddies

And I simply couldn’t choose between these three for W is for Wet:

Hello rock!

432:1000 Splash TtV

That`s COLD!

And my first entry was this one, O is for Outside:

429:1000 Spring at the park TtV

Lara is also posting her progress weekly on the blog, and providing photography tips and tutorials, so be sure to follow along.

Thanks, Kids in the Capital, for this excellent new project! And, erm, I’ll try to restrain myself from adding too many pix. 🙂

Magic at the NAC

When I was a kid, my cousin Mike always had one of those magic trick kits, and we used to put on magic and music shows for my Granny and Granda. We’d stand on a “stage” by the fireplace mantle, I’d sing and Michael would do a trick or two. I loved those performances, and the enthusiastic response of my clapping grandparents.

I thought of those days a few times at last night’s Mysterioso show at the National Arts Centre. These old-style posters hanging over the stage set the perfect mood for the night — old school magic, excellent music and a few fun twists.

NAC3

As I mentioned, we were lucky to receive a complimentary pair of tickets for the show, which conveniently happened to fall on the 15th anniversary of the night Beloved and I met. It was a great way to celebrate, and for a few hours it was nice to get out and be the ‘us’ that used to go to wonderful places like the NAC regularly, before the kids kept us home!

There were different types of illusionists featured through the evening. Illusionist Joseph Gabriel worked old-skool magic with a dozen doves, a series of illusions made even more impressive when we found out later that Gabriel’s own doves weren’t allowed to cross the border, so he had to work with borrowed local birds! “Les” and his daughter “Dazzle” put a funny spin (you’d recognize the pun if you’d seen the show!) on the lady-in-the-box disappearing act with their comedic magic act. But the act that dropped jaws throughout the theatre was the quick-change duo of David and Dania. You might have seen them on America’s Got Talent a couple of years ago.

Beloved couldn’t stop talking about the incredible singing voice of Christina Bianco and her charming musical impressions. He said the real magic was how such a tiny little toy piano of a girl had pipes like a church organ! The core of the night’s entertainment, though, was this: Maestro Jack Everly and the NAC Orchestra.

NAC1

As if that weren’t enough of a treat, the small group of bloggers that had been invited to the show were then treated to a special after-show audience with magician Joseph Gabriel and Maestro Everly. They chatted easily with us, and provided a little inside information on what it’s like to mount a production like Mysterioso. For example, it took nearly five months to do a reverse transcription of the music for the show: the magicians usually work from carefully timed and coordinated prerecorded tapes, and it took months to recreate those into an orchestral score. And even though there were two full rehearsals for the orchestra yesterday, the musicians only saw the actual magic acts as they were unfolding live on the stage. How cool is that? Mr Everly said it’s a testament to the orchestra’s professionalism that they could continue to play with the magic show unfolding for the first time in front of them!

Someone asked Joseph Gabriel what launched him down a career path as an illusionist, and he said it was a book he read in the library when he was nine years old. As mom to a curious-minded 8 year old, this made me smile. As a matter of fact, magic kits have always been a favourite gift of mine to give to boys of that age, largely inspired by those long-ago magic shows Mike and I used to perform.

And I haven’t even told you about all the fun bloggy peeps who were there: Suze and Katharine and Andrea and Lana and Julie… and apparently Anna and Shannon were there, too!

It was a terrific night in a thousand fun little ways. Special thanks to the NAC for putting on a great show, and for making a special night out for local bloggers. When I asked Jack Everly if he liked playing on the stage at the NAC, he enthused about the wonderful acoustics, and we agreed how lucky we are to have this treasure in Ottawa. The NAC truly is a local treasure — have you been lately?

Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures: The Log Farm Sugarbush

Looking for an inexpensive March Break adventure? I’ve got a great suggestion for you! There’s a delicious breakfast, an historic farm with friendly barnyard animals, mud, maple, sap, mud, hiking, mud, maple taffy, marshmallows, lunch — and did I mention the mud?

Edited to add: As of March 2016, the Log Farm is no longer operated by Lone Star. See this notice on their Facebook page:

Screen Shot 2016-03-05 at 7.27.20 AM

We headed out with another family and a half and spent a spectacular Monday morning at the Log Farm sugar bush. It’s a true hidden treasure, hiding in plain sight just off Cedarview Rd (runs parallel to hwy 416 from Hunt Club to Fallowfield) in the Greenbelt just north of Barrhaven. We’ve been to a couple of sugar bushes over the years, and I have to say, this one was our favourite by far — and not just because it was an easy five minute drive from our house!

We started the day with this:
Breakfast

You know how sometimes the breakfasts in a sugar bush can be a little, um, meh? Not this one! Yummy pancakes, sausages, home fries and scrambled eggs, with plenty of hot sauce and of course, fresh maple syrup. Delish!!

When we were full, we wandered through the woods and across a great big open field to the farm buildings. (Little did we know, we’d only begun our hiking for the day!)

Walking to the farm

(Yes, one is wearing ski pants and a toque and one is wearing shorts. That is one of many differences between two and nearly a teenager! He was super-patient with Lucas, though, and since Beloved was at work I didn’t mind the extra help at all!)

The farm itself is a treasure. Build in the 1850s, you can wander through and imagine what life must have been like living with two parents and NINE children in a tiny two-story log cabin outfitted with a lot of period items. It’s really quite lovely!

Across the barnyard, you can play with Pearl and Wilbur the potbellied pigs or watch in amusement as the unfriendly goat tries to headbut them. (Whoops, forgot to upload the picture of the pigs and the goat. Oh well.) I missed the cows and the sheep, too, but here’s a shot of Simon and Lucas trying to feed the not-hungry sheep.

Feeding the sheep

The pony was a little friendlier but beware — he nips!

Feeding the pony

After breakfast and the farm and the animals, our adventure had only barely begun. We set off on what would seem like a seven mile hike back into the woods in search of the sugar maples.

Hiking out

I also missed taking pictures of the squelching mud path and the pond-sized puddles we had to traverse on the way. Sorry, I was too busy keeping the clumsy toddler from soaking himself. Thank goodness we had the foresight to wear boots despite the gorgeous spring day!

I did, however, get lots of pictures like these! Have you ever seen how maple trees are tapped? These are the sap buckets.

Sap bucket

The tap doesn’t hurt the tree, and the sap drips out steadily throughout the day. Sap needs warm days and cold nights to run well.

Maple tap

Much to our delight, we were invited to collect some sap in these aluminum buckets.

Stacked buckets

Each kid got his or her own bucket and headed out into the woods to retrieve the sap from the collector buckets.

Collecting sap

This is what a bucket of tree sap looks like!

Full of sap!

The sap goes into a giant tub called the evaporator and boils down until it becomes maple syrup. You boil it down even more and it looks like this:

Boiling taffy

Then you pour it out on snow it becomes maple taffy. Yum!

Making taffy on the snow

After another long, squelchy hike back out, we took a marshmallow-roasting break back at the farm on the way out. (I know, I know — maple syrup followed by maple taffy followed by marshmallows! Good thing we had to expend all that energy on the hike to the sugar shack and back!)

Marshmallows!

Finally, we wandered back to where we started.

Walking home

By the time we got back to the pancake house, it was close enough to lunch time that we had a few more pancakes and sausages to fortify us for the drive home. Breakfast, adventure, lunch — talk about a complete morning of entertainment!

If you’re looking for an amazing sugar-bush adventure close to home, I highly recommend the Log Farm. You know what I liked best about it? I didn’t feel like one of 600 people they were planning to shuffle through today. The friendly staff make the long, muddy walk to the sugar shack worth the adventure. And the three-hour afternoon nap for the toddler was a nice bonus, too!

A Magical Giveaway!

It’s not too often that I get dance-around-the-house excited by blog pitches, but this one did it for me!

This week, I got an e-mail from the National Arts Centre (NAC) offering me two tickets to a special bloggers-night-out at a performance of Mysterioso: Music and Magic, a part of the CTV Pops series. Here’s the NAC’s description of the show:

Described by Johnny Carson, as “one of the classiest magic acts you’re going to see in a long time! The best I’ve seen!”, Joseph Gabriel has performed on virtually every major television variety show; for ten consecutive years in Las Vegas, and in an unprecedented 18 month Broadway run. His masterful sleight-of-hand and spectacular illusions will be in perfect harmony with our Pops Maestro Jack Everly leading the NAC Orchestra in magical orchestral gems guaranteed to leave you enchanted.

Here’s Jack Everly describing the event:

Doesn’t that sound like a wicked-fun night out? (A night out? Oh my, I simply can’t remember the last time Beloved and I had a night out. And you know what? Next Thursday, the night of the show, is the 15th anniversary of the night we met. Kismet or what?)

Even more fun, the NAC is offering special media access for photographs at the beginning of the show, and computers and wifi for tweeting before and after the show and during intermission. I love the NAC, and miss the days when we used to go there regularly. I’ve seen some fantastic shows there, from the Canadian Brass to Steven Wright to Holly Cole.

And of course, everything is more delightful when I can share it with my bloggy buddies. That’s right, I have a pair of tickets to give away to one lucky reader. Yay!

Here’s the details:

  • The tickets are for the 8 pm show on Thursday March 18. Please don’t enter if you’re not sure you can attend!
  • To enter, leave a comment on this post telling me something magical — I’ll leave that to your interpretation!
  • You must leave a valid e-mail address, so I can contact you.
  • I’ll use the random number generator to choose a winner on Monday March 15 around noon.
  • The winner will pick up the tickets directly from the NAC box office.

Music! Magic!! A chance to wear grown-up shoes and lipstick! Squeeee!!!

(And, good luck!)