Another chapter in the (apparently endless) iPod saga

Those of you who have been around a while know I have, um, issues with iPods. Or, perhaps more specifically, iPods seem to have issues with me. Let’s take a moment to review my rather checkered iPod past, shall we?

I joined the clan of the Apple faithful in August of 2006. Beloved bought me a 1G iPod nano, and I loved the heck out of the little dickens. Perhaps I loved it a little too much, though, because it died an untimely death a mere two and a half weeks later.

The replacement iPod lasted a whole five months before it seized up and died in the midst of transfering a play list from my computer one day. Less than a year old, though, it was replaced under Apple’s one-year warranty protection plan.

The new iPod, shipped straight from Apple, died before I even opened the box. It arrived in a pre-deceased condition. Seriously!

So, if you’re keeping score, that’s four iPods in six months. The next one lived a good life. A whole eight months went by before I, um, laundered it to death in the fall of 2007.

And because the universe was running out of new and innovative ways to kill my iPod(s), the latest replacement was simply stolen out of my unlocked van one night almost exactly a year ago.

I replaced it, though, and I’ve come to be rather fond of this latest lucky seventh iPod, the one that has been with me the longest. Perhaps that’s why of all the trauma and hassle resulting from the accident on Thursday, the loss of this last iPod was the bitterest pill to swallow.

I don’t usually leave my iPod in the van. I’d had it at the gym, as usual, on Wednesday, was distracted leaving the van and left it lying on the seat. Later in the day, I stuffed it into the glove box, but the cord from the earphones was dangling out. Thursday before work, I stopped to get something out of the van on my way to the bus, and noticed the dangling cord. “I should put that in the house,” I thought, but knew I was running late for the bus. “Okay, I’ll just stuff the cord into the glove box and get it later. It’ll be fine.”

Famous last words.

About 10 hours later, the front corner of the van closest to the glove compartment crumpled into a heap shortly before being engulfed in flames, and then throughly soaked by the firefighters’ hose. If my iPods can’t survive a data transfer, there was no way it could have possibly survived this:

Aftermath

(I couldn’t resist this last picture when we went to the impound lot to retrieve any personal belongings from the van yesterday. You know, it’s amazing what minutaie collects in your car. Umbrellas, sippy cups, CDs, kids’ toys and books, a soother (I left that behind), a case of club soda… it was both traumatic and cathartic to pick through the charred ruins of my former van, collecting these little bits of normalcy. It was a very surreal moment, especially because the van was in the exact condition it was in at the moment of impact — the key still in the ignition, the windows were still open, because it was a warm and glorious summer afternoon. That more than anything brought me immediately back to the crash…)

When I first looked through the open window, after I took in the still-inflated air bags, I noticed the glove compartment was open. “For chrissake,” I thought. “Bad enough I’ve got to deal with everything else, but someone’s been rifling through the van looking for anything worth stealing.” It’s a secure yard, though, and it turns out the glove box just popped open from the impact.

We’d had the van for nearly a year when we realized that it actually has two glove compartments, one above the other. The second one, the less obvious one, is where I had stashed my iPod. After looking at the sodden remains of my owner’s manual in the lower glove compartment (I left it behind, but the magpie in me kept a little Dodge Ram emblem that had popped off of something), I had little hope that there would be anything left of the iPod. I wasn’t even sure if I’d be able to open the glove compartment, looking at the state of the rest of that corner of the van.

It opened easily, though, and I was surprised to see very little evidence of the fire inside the glove compartment. I reached in and pulled out the iPod, still in it’s Roots neoprene case and still attached to the headphones. When the headphones actually dripped as I pulled them out, so saturated was the foam padding on the ear pieces, my heart sank. I’d been holding out against hope, I think, without even realizing it. I threw the whole thing into the box with the umbrellas and the sippy cups, and threw them into the back of the car.

A few minutes later, I pulled it out to show Beloved. I reached into the neoprene case, and could feel the dampness through the neoprene. I peered at the LED display in the bright sunlight, and to my shock, the display was working. I must have hit the clickwheel with my thumb as I was pulling it out. I was so surprised, I actually turned it off again, and then back on. I clicked a few times, and cranked the click wheel to turn up the volume, and damn if Headley wasn’t suddenly blasting out of the sodden headphones.

Talk about lucky number seven. My iPod survived!

Random bullets after the crash

Just over two days later, and I’m surprised to find myself still mildly traumatized over the whole “my van is on fire” thing. I keep alternating between feeling breathless with gratitude that it wasn’t worse, and sick with regret. Funny how these things seem to come over you in waves.

  • Lucas continues to be fine. He’s got the faintest red scratch on his neck from his seat belt, but is otherwise unscathed. Thank you, universe, for protecting him.
  • Ironically, almost all of my injuries are a result of the safety features of the van. I have a couple of spectacular bruises, one on my thigh that I can’t quite account for — I think it might have been the lap belt, or maybe the van door — and a couple of burns from the air bags, one on my hand and one on my leg. My knee has a burn on top of a bruise, which is really kind of painful – I think the air bags for the driver’s side are under the steering wheel and that’s what hit my knee. I’m a little bit bodily sore, but no worse than you’d be after a hard workout at the gym. Again, thank you universe.
  • The insurance company hasn’t yet sent out their appraiser, but the EMS people and the tow truck guy all seem to think the van will be a total write-off. Since the front end was engulfed in flames, I have a hard time seeing how it would be recoverable. We were leasing it, and the lease would have been up in February or March. The nice guy at Chrysler confirmed that they’ll either provide a new vehicle for the remainder of the lease or, more likely, pay out the lease and we start again from scratch. That’s a bummer because Chrysler no longer has a leasing program, so we’d have to buy outright if we go with another Grand Caravan.
  • I’m torn on the issue of replacing the van. My strongest instinct, which is most surely a coping mechanism, is to restore order. That means getting EXACTLY what we had before, same year and same colour. That’s my strongest impulse, but I’m pretty sure it’s not in any way based in reason. I’m conflicted — by all accounts, such a relatively minor accident should NOT have caused that kind of fire. On the other hand, Lucas and I are safe and relatively unscathed.
  • Regardless, we need something. We briefly toyed with the idea of going back to using only one car, but that’s simply not feasible any more. Right now, even though we have insurance coverage for a rental, we can’t find a minivan in the region to rent, so we’ve had to cram all three car seats into the back of our Focus wagon. It works, but we have to take out one booster, belt a kid in, and then put the booster back and belt in the middle kid. An inelegant solution, and it won’t be long before they’re trying to kill each other, being confined cheek-to-jowl like that.
  • Another thing to be grateful for — that this happened a week after and not a week before the family vacation.
  • Today, I’m going to head out to the impound lot to see if anything is recoverable from the inside of the van. This makes me want to cry every time I think about it. I miss my van, I want it back. When the crash happened, Beloved found one of Lucas’s Bob the Builder toys when he took a quick look at the inside of the van and it was soaked with the water from the firefighters. This makes me want to cry, too.
  • Not only will this cause us a great amount of inconvenience in the next little while, but it stands to cost us a pretty penny, too. Since the lease will likely be paid out, we now face the regular expenses associated with buying a car — downpayments, etc. And my fine, which is only $100. And the deductible. Sigh.
  • Plus, we had a really sweet deal with the lease, if you’d remember my mad negotiating skillz, and I’m just not sure I have it in me right now to bother with all that. I can’t imagine that we’d get a monthly rate for a purchase anywhere near the low rate we had for a 27-month lease. I wish I could just call somebody up and order a new van over the phone, knowing I was paying the best possible price. And we can’t even get started on that until the insurance company appraises the old van and negotiates with Chrysler on the outcome, a conversation I am not allowed to be a part of.
  • Oh, and while the insurance does cover the cost of replacing the car seats, with a reduction for depreciation (sigh), it doesn’t cover my poor, beleaguered iPod. I’d have to claim that under my house contents insurance. When I bought it, it was less than the cost of the deductible, and you can’t even buy a 2G nano anymore. I simply don’t feel that I’m entitled to spend another $200 to replace it, on top of all the other expenses we’ve suddenly inherited right now. Sigh.
  • I’m whining, aren’t I? I know, I know, I am supremely grateful that everything turned out okay, and that it could have been so much worse. It’s all just so overwhelming and I really want it all to go away. I guess I just thought that the point of insurance was to restore things to more or less exactly the way they were before the accident and that is not quite how it’s turning out.
  • Back to the gratitude side: I am so grateful to all of you for your sweet comments and notes over the past few days. I think my favourite was François, who let his toasts burn while he read our story. Maybe I can submit that to the insurance company, too? I thought maybe some of you had wandered away for good — nice to hear from you again!
  • And I have to say that almost everybody I have spoken to has been extremely kind and tried their best to be helpful, from the people at the insurance company and the brokerage to the car rental places to the leasing manager at the car dealership to the woman at Ford who is rush ordering us a part so we can put Lucas’s car seat in the middle of the back seat of the Focus, perhaps keeping the big boys from killing each other. Everyone has been beyond professional and has tried their best to help us out.
  • If you take away anything from these posts, please let it be this: always, ALWAYS take a minute to make sure the straps are secure and properly placed in your car seat. Don’t let them get twisted, they have to lie flat. The buckle should be at the child’s nipple level, and tight enough that you can only fit two fingers between the strap and the child. You might have to adjust this if your child is wearing a jacket or just a thin t-shirt. Please do.
  • I’m a lucky, lucky girl.

Project 365: Two Explores in one week!

It may have been a traumatic week otherwise, but it was a good week for photography. I got some gorgeous shots this week, and I’m really happy with most of the pictures I took. Funny how everything creative, from writing to blogging to photography, runs hot and cold, isn’t it?

Although it seems like a million years ago now, this was the photo I took to commemorate our 10-year anniversary last Friday. These guys were the centrepiece on our wedding cake!

165:365 Wedding frogs

This is one of the two pictures that made it into Flickr’s “Explore” feature this week. I wait all year for my daisies to come out, and they grow in a large and unruly but happy-looking patch in my front yard. One of the first pictures I took with my D40 was of Simon in the daisies in 2007! I shot this one from down low, pointing up and into the light on one of the rare days of sun this week, so the petals have a neat translucent quality to them. (I didn’t do much post-processing on this, just a little bit of sharpening to bring out the edges and a tiny bit of a warmer cast. The blurry bits around the edges are the leaves from the tree above the daisies.)

166:365 Into the light

This is the other picture that made it into Explore. When I saw the rhubarb stacked up in one of the Market stalls, I liked the almost-repeating shapes of the cut edges, and the almost-repeating patterns in the stalks, and the nice complimentary transition from red to green. I thought it was a throwaway snap, actually, until I was reviewing my shots that evening and something about it appealed to me. Even so, I am quite perplexed by how much people seem to like it — random strangers keep adding it as a favourite and it’s been bouncing in and out of Explore all week.

168:365 Rhubarb

This one, on the other hand, is not only one of my favourites this week but one of my all-time faves. I called it “Precarious” – something about those about-to-tumble blocks gives it a nice dynamicism. (Is that a word?) I sat and watched Lucas stack the same blocks over and over and over again, snapping pictures of the different constructions, for the better part of an hour — and a hundred images!! This one was the best, IMHO.

167:365 Precarious

I was making dinner the other day, and hadn’t snapped a single picture all day. It’s either a testament to my newly acquired comfort with the camera or a testament to my mad mothering skillz, but half a year ago I wouldn’t be able to conceptualize, compose and capture a photo like this while in the midst of making dinner!

169:365 Juicy

(Conveniently, I’ve recently realized that the spot between the two burners on my stove makes for an excellent seamless white back drop. I’d been using the bathtub, but the light is better in the kitchen! I used it for the frog pictures above, too.)

In my favourite Flickr group, there are weekly challenges posted. This week, the challenge was to take a self-portrait. I made this one on my lunch hour, but I wasn’t overly fond of it. I’d planned to take another image of some sort in the evening, but that plan got derailed by the whole van-on-fire thing, so this is it for the day.

171:365 Working lunch

This is my favourite picture of the week. I took it when we first arrived on Victoria Island for our Aboriginal Experiences adventure. I noticed the reflection right away, but it was a bit of a trick to get the image composed fast enough to still take the picture and get to Lucas in time to prevent him from soaking himself. I did it! And I love the image. I desaturated it just a bit in Photoshop to give it that timeless feeling.

170:365 The Puddle

Funny, the rhubarb and the daisy pictures made it into Explore, but I far prefer the photos of the puddle and the blocks. But then, I’m a little biased about the subject matter. I really don’t even like rhubarb!

The one where she totals the van

So, remember waaaaay back, when we were first looking at shopping for a mini-van? And I was petulant because I did not want a mini van, thought they were cumbersome and mildly embarrassing? I’ve been meaning to blog for months now about my dirty little secret — I adore that van. Love it. Love driving it, love the space in it, love having a car of my own. Well, past tense – loved it. I was in an accident last night, and the van was a write-off. My first-ever car accident. Go big or go home, right.

I was making a left turn from Fisher into the Lone Star parking lot to pick up some takeout, with Lucas in the van. Lots of traffic. The lady in the inside oncoming lane waved me through. The chick in the outside lane was doing about 60 when she hit me. I didn’t even see her coming. When I thought about it later, I didn’t hear a squeal of brakes, or else I would have looked her way, so I’m not even sure she saw me.

She was in a little sedan, but she hit me hard enough to spin me around a 1/4 turn. The first thing I registered after “oh shit” and “the baby is in the car!” was “ouch, these fucking airbags are burning my (bare) legs!”

I jumped out without even thinking to turn the car off and got Lucas out of his car seat – he of course started crying on impact – to check him out, but he was fine. He doesn’t even have bruise marks from the seat belt. Thank god, thank god, thank god for properly installed car seats.

Right away, people were trying to help. One guy was behind me even as I was undoing Luke’s belt, saying “Oh my god, I saw the baby seat in the back and my heart stopped, is he okay?” Another guy is already calling 911. I’m pretty sure I’m okay and Lucas is okay but holy fuck it was a hell of an impact. A young girl is there, and she’s ashen and stunned, she reaches out her hand and starts to cry saying “oh my god was there a baby in the car?” I automatically reach out to grasp her hands and realize that she was driving the other car. She’s maybe 20. She’s far more freaked out than I am, but she seems to be largely okay, too.

For once in my life, I have my cell phone on me. In my purse. In the van. And as I turn to go back to the van I see that there are little licks of flame underneath it. Flame. And my brain goes on a funny little tangent and says, “Wow man, this is some serious shit you’ve gotten yourself into.” I turn to a nice lady who’s asking if we’re okay, it turns out that she’s the one who stopped to wave me through in the oncoming lane, and I ask her to hold Lucas while I go get my purse because it’s okay for me to go toward the flaming van, not so much the baby.

I get my purse and my phone, and people keep asking me if we’re okay, and I’m increasingly convinced we are, except for the wretched mess of the front of the van. And those troubling little flames under it. So I call Beloved, and try my very damnedest not to freak him out more than I have to. “Hi babe, listen, I’m okay and Lucas is fine. We’re really fine. But I’ve been in accident, and the van is in bad shape.” And just about this point, it’s the only time the hint of hysteria gets to me as I watch those tiny flames start to lick up the front of the van. “And the van in on Fire. It’s on FIRE. (deep breath, deep breath, do NOT freak him out right now, you must make sure he stays calm) But we’re okay. So can you come and pick us up?”

So I’m standing there in the Lone Star parking lot, holding Lucas in my arms, because I didn’t even bother putting any shoes on him because we were just going to the takeout counter and back, and we’re watching my van go up in flames. Surreal moment, dude. There’s this exceptional lady who appears, and she keeps talking to Lucas, to me, and she’s just the most calming presence. She tries to lead me away from watching the van go up in smoke (and really impressive bright orange flames) saying, “You don’t need to see this” but I tell her that I really do. Her sweet boys, maybe 9 and 11, have seen the whole thing and they are obviously torn between the thrill of watching my van incinerate and care for me and Lucas. I am in love with this family of guardian angels.

The fire department and police and paramedics show up and they put the fire out really quickly, wow, the little detached part of my brain is busy evaluating the efficiency of the fire department and the size of the hose and the sheer number of emergency vehicles and personnel who seem to have materialized out of the sewers or something they got here so quickly.

The paramedics begin to assess us, and I wave them toward the girl first. Once the fire is out, I lose a little bit of the adrenaline that has been coursing through my system and realize that the baby is very heavy and so am I and I think I’ll just go sit down on that curb for a minute if nobody minds. There’s another nice lady, an older lady, who seems to work in one of the stores in the plaza, and she’s offering me a chair, which I decline, and a drink, which I decline and she’s offering me food for me and for the baby and even though I’m starving I keep saying polite nos until finally just because she really seems to need to get me something I say some water would be nice. She comes back out with another man who ought to be her husband if he isn’t, they seem like a nice matched set, both with the remnants of a slavic accent from long ago, and I have to all over again assure him that I need nothing else. I realize later they work at the Macs convenience store behind me, and I really feel badly that I didn’t pay for the water bottle (and cup and straw) she brought me, so I’ll have to go pay for it today.

In a quiet moment, I sit on the curb and cry just a few tears, more in response to the sheer kindness being show to us than over what has happened. I know the insurance will cover the cost of the van, mostly, and that these things happen. I do have a bit of a bad moment, though, whenever I let myself think of what could have, might have happened. How very much worse it could have been. It makes me weirdly giddy. My new best friend, I find out her name is Karen, the lady who tried to convince me not to watch the van burning, reappears. She’s told the Lone Star takeout counter what happened (note to self, call Lone Star to apologize, too, I never did go pick up the food) and has brought orange slices in a plastic cup and four mini-packs of crackers. As I’m sitting on the curb, taking bites of orange out of my mouth and feeding them to Lucas, the police officer walks up with a stroller and a Roots backpack that look suspiciously like mine. This is the detail that temporarily sends my brain into blue screen until I realize he’s retrieved them from the back of the van for me. This makes me start to cry again. He says it’s about all he could recover, and I realize my iPod and my gym membership card are in the glove compartment. Crisped beyond recognition, I’m sure, and likely a lot more wet than the time I sent them through the washing machine. My brain wanders away for a while, contemplating why the universe does not want me to have an iPod.

While I’m overwhelmed by the accident, what really amazes me is the sheer kindness of the people around me. What seems like dozens of people have asked if I’m okay, if Lucas is okay, if there is anything they can do. The lady in the oncoming lane who waved me through has had to move on, but she leaves her name and number. The emergency services people are outstanding. I learn that the paramedic and one of the fire department guys live on the street behind me and have been in my back-fence neighbour’s hot tub. I tell them I am disgruntled that I have not. The paramedic seems to appreciate my humour-as-a-coping-mechanism schtick and we somehow end up arguing about whether almost turning forty is wretched or not. When the police officer arrives to finish his report, he joins in on the debate. Everybody is genial and it’s a pleasant afternoon except for the first-degree burns on my hand and second degree burns on my leg from the air bags, and the fact that they’re hauling the burnt husk of my minivan onto a flatbed to haul to the junkyard.

Beloved arrives, and he’s dropped the big boys off with my mom. I’m so relieved to see him, to see he is smiling and that he’s here. A few minutes later, as I’m talking to the police officer, my dad arrives, too. I should have called my mom. Too many things to remember. The paramedic asks one more time if I want to go to the hospital, and while all seems fine, I think it prudent to get Lucas checked out. As soon as I realize, though, that the paramedics can only take him to the children’s hospital, I balk. No way am I taking my healthy baby into the emerg there, with H1N1 and who knows what. But the ambulance cannot take him anywhere else. The paramedic explains other options, I can bring him to a walk-in, or bring him to Queensway Carleton hospital myself. I decide on the latter.

The police officer is a gem. He tells me he’s about to add to my pain, and I get a ticket for “failure to yield” – $100 and three demerit points. I’m giddy with relief again, because I hadn’t known what to expect of this part. I suspect he has been easy on me, administering the lowest fine he was obligated to, and I’m a little choked up with relief. Right about this time, we realize that we have a problem. We have never put a baby car seat in the Focus. We discuss options for getting Lucas home with the police officer. I know that car seats should be discarded after an impact like this, but we decide in this case that it’s a better alternative than the booster seats in the Focus that the big boys use. Mark goes to the van to retrieve it, but it’s soaked and covered in bits of glass from when the windshield (shudder) exploded in the fire. Not an option. We chew it over for a minute, and knowing we have a proper spare car seat at home, we decide the best option is to strap Lucas into the booster, and the police officer will escort all the way home. By this time, maybe an hour or even a bit less since impact, and everything has been cleared away. The young woman has gone to the hospital, but I speak to her mother and it is more precautionary than anything. Her mother is also kind. The cars have been hauled away. Beloved drives us home.

My adventures did not end there. In shorthand: I waffle between a walk-in and the hospital, and decide on hospital just because I fear the walk-in might just send me there anyway. Arrive at Queensway Carleton hospital, realize I don’t have Lucas’s health card. Just then my mother calls, with that uncanny intuition mothers have, and asks if she can help. She offers to get the card and bring it to me, and to help with Lucas at the ER. I agree. I get into the ER, and see there is not a single empty seat in the waiting room. I ask the triage nurse if we’re looking at an hours-long wait. She nods. “Even with the baby?” I ask hopefully. She nods again, and an elderly lady tells me she’s been waiting since 1 pm. It’s a little after seven. I walk out. While waiting for my mom, I call my pediatrician’s number, thinking about the after hours clinic. I have to call back twice to get the number right, but eventually get through and get an appointment for 8 pm. I have a little more than 30 minutes. Still waiting for my mom, call the insurance company. The guy taking the details actually says, “Wow” when I tell him about the van going up in flames. I’m impressed that he’s impressed. Swallow down another “what might have happened but didn’t” panic attack. Getting increasingly agitated for time, and my mom shows up. I take the health card, thank her, and we head in opposite directions. I try to pay for my parking and can’t get the infernal device to work. Feeling time-pressured, I finally get it to work. $16 on my Visa to walk in and out of the ER. Gah. Then, the infernal gate won’t open. I’m nearly hysterical, it’s almost the time of my appointment at the after-hours clinic and I still have to drive 15 minutes, and it keeps telling me my ticket isn’t valid. I repay, just to be out of there. It accepts another $16 charge on my Visa, and the gate still won’t open. With four or five cars queued behind me, I lose it. Lose. It. I jump out of my car and yell toward the unmanned barrier, “For Christ’s sake, will somebody open the goddamned gate!” By the time I hit the word gate, my voice has gone up three octaves and I’m crying. Total meltdown. Long story short (way too late for that) I make it to the after-hours clinic and — the door is locked. I call, and I’m in the wrong place. Remember this story? I’ve gone to the place I should have gone the last time, and it turns out I should have gone to the place I did go. It takes the very last of my reserve not to do an encore presentation of “meltdown at the after-hours clinic” but I manage. The doctor examines Lucas, and we marvel over the fact that there is not a single bruise on him. He is perfect, as always.

It’s all good.

(Edited to add: you had to know there’s be a photograph. Can you believe it’s the one time in a million I didn’t brink the Nikon — and that’s a good thing — but I snapped this one with my cell phone, not so much for the 365 project as for potential insurance issues, and posterity.)

171b:365 Lookit that, my van is on fire.

One of Ottawa’s hidden treasures: Victoria Island

My friend Todd and I, together with seven kids — my three, two of his three, and two cousins — ranging in age from 17 months to 10 years old, had the most lovely adventure yesterday morning and I highly recommend it as a family excusion in Ottawa. (Why is it far easier for two people to manage seven kids than one person to manage three? The physics of parenting never fails to perplex me!)

We visited Victoria Island and Aborignal Experiences. Never heard of them? I know, and it’s a shame. I’d been wanting to explore Victoria Island for some time. You’ve driven over it if you’ve crossed the Chaudiere Bridge, but have you ever stopped to take a closer look? You should!

Fifty years ago, families lived on Victoria Island, but now with the exception of the Aboriginal Experiences site and a few unmarked buildings, the island has largely returned to it’s natural state. It’s such an incongruous place, lushly green and lightly forested and peppered with ruins of the industrial age, but just steps from the heart of the nation’s capital. The outer walls of this century-old but long-since abandoned carbide mill still stand, and they’re doing some sort of construction work on it.

big old wall

I’m not even sure what this used to be — part of a hydro project, I think. I was fascinated by the various ruins, though, and would like to do more research.

ruins

We arrived (an easy drive — just follow Booth to where the new War Museum is and turn right off the Chaudiere Bridge if you’re coming from Ottawa) at about ten in the morning, a full hour before Aboriginal Experiences opened for the day. Conveniently, it took us about an hour to walk the eastern perimeter of the island, with plenty of stops to peek over outlooks, examine gopher holes and climb random hills.

reflections

There are beautiful views of the Alexandria Bridge, the National Gallery, the Supreme Court building and of course, Parliament Hill, from the eastern tip of the island.

parliament hill

You could say Victoria Island is a stone’s throw away from both downtown Ottawa and downtown Hull, erm, I mean Gatineau…

throwing rocks

After an easy loop that brought us under the Portage bridge but not as far as Chaudiere Falls (I’m saving that for the next visit – stay tuned!) at the western-most part of the island, we arrived back at our starting point and, conveniently, the Aboriginal Experiences site.

I knew that pow-wows and other aboriginal activities took place on special occasions on Victoria Island, but I had no idea there was a permanent (May through October) museum set up there.

totem

There are different tour packages available. With limited time and short attention spans, we chose the basic “Legends” package that got us into the Aboriginal Experiences site and an interpretive tour. (Other packages include authentic Pow-Wow dances, storytelling theatre, crafts, and traditional lunches.) Once we got in the door, though, we still had a half an hour to pass before our tour began. I was a little worried that the kids would start getting antsy, but I was amazed at how content they were simply to explore the (relatively small) site in the way that only kids can do.

tipi and parliament

I think Tristan and Keegan spent the full half hour in this perfectly-climbable tree near the river’s edge.

tree

Lucas was fascinated by the Turtle clan’s tipi.

turtle

I think maybe the First Nations people had the right idea, if they intended this as a kid-cage.

kids cage

In the end, I think letting the kids run wild for an hour and a half did a lot to improve their attention spans for the 40 minute interpretive tour. I have to admit, I was impressed that they were actually paying attention and even asked a few questions. I was highly impressed by the young woman who hosted our tour — by her ease in presenting, her patience with a 17-month old who wanted to steal the show, and by how much I learned.

teacher

I was particularly fascinated by how the Iroqouis nations were matrilineal, meaning the women chose their husbands and when they did, the husband forfeited his clan and his family to join the wife’s family. (Fine for me to do, not so fine for my boys to do!!!)

It was a really interesting and unique way to spend a cloudy, grey summer morning. From the local Ottawa history in the ruins to the greater Aboriginal history of the island, it was fascinating to me and at least acceptably interesting to the kids. It’s definitely worth checking it out!

Next time I go back, I want to explore the Chaudiere side of the island, and I’ll be bringing this really neat history of the island and its buildings that I just discovered with me for reference.

The Family Photographer: Protecting your images online

This is an issue I’ve been struggling with for a while, so it’s not so much as a “how-to” post as an invitation to discuss the subject.

The keen-eyed among you will have noticed that I’ve started watermarking my photos. (A watermark is, in this case, a small and mostly transparent addition to your image that shows the image is copyrighted, to deter unathorized use.) I’ve toyed with the idea of watermarking my images for years, but was too lazy to do it. Now that I run all my pix through Photoshop before I publish them, and thanks to this great tutorial from one of my 365 friends, I can drop a watermark into each image with three clicks.

You can see it in this photo of the American falls at Niagara Falls (because I don’t have enough Niagara Falls in my blog this week, right?)

American Falls 2

I really don’t want the watermark to interfere with the images, so I tucked it way down in the corner and tried to make it mostly transparent. (The problem with putting it way down in the corner is that it’s not too difficult to crop it out, should someone be so inclined, but the kind of people who steal images are generally the lazy sort anyway, and I suffer no delusions that my images are worth the extra effort to acquire!)

So that’s the ‘what’ of watermarking, and a hint at the ‘how,’ but what of the why?

I talked to Andrea a bit about this when we had lunch the other day, and it was great to finally talk to someone about it after stewing on it for weeks. I’ve been having a crisis of confidence about having so much of my world online and out in public lately. Part of it was the (albeit totally innocuous) recognition of Lucas and Beloved in the library by a nice lady who reads the blog and lives in my neighbourhood, but it was mostly motivated by some weird traffic in my Flickr stats.

You might remember back in the fall of 2007, there was a kerfuffle on the ‘net about people stealing images of kids and making fake profiles on the social networking site Orkut. About a month ago, I noticed that there was traffic from Orkut that pointed to a (completely ordinary) picture of Tristan from an apple-picking trip a couple of years ago. I made the image private, and that stopped the traffic, but there are still a few links from sites that Flickr doesn’t recognize pointing to random photos in my stream and if I can’t reconcile it I’m not comfortable with it.

For a while, I was so twitchy about the issue that I thought the solution might be to simply stop taking pictures of the boys for my 365. That idea made me feel sick, and sad, and a little angry. The whole reason I started Project 365 was to improve my photographic skills, and while it’s nice to be able to take better pictures of carrots and fence posts, what *really* matters to me is better pictures of the people I love. If I were to quit taking pictures of the kids, I might as well quit the 365 entirely.

I toyed for a while with making every image of family members private or for contacts only on Flickr (truth be told, I’m still thinking about it) but that certainly wouldn’t help with the images I post here. And it may be a little bit too late in any case, what with four and a half years worth of images already out there in cyberspace.

In the end, I’ve decided on a middle ground of cautious awareness. I think it’s prudent to be conscious of what you put on the Web but, thanks in part to the chat I had with Andrea, I’m feeling less exposed and freaked out about the whole thing. I’m taking simple steps to minimize any potential risks, like being cognizant of the kind of images I put up — no bare bums, stuff like that. I don’t post their pictures to any group that has “child” or “babies” or anything like that in it. And I monitor the traffic on Flickr much more carefully than I monitor my blog traffic. If anything makes me even remotely uncomfortable, I make the image private — so far, I’ve only done it twice.

Andrea asked me what it was that I would be worried about, what nefarious use of my images I feared, and I don’t know, exactly, what could be done. Frankly, I’d rather not think about it! But, as I’ve often said about living my life online, I’m not going to give undue attention to some ephermal and ill-defined potential risk.

And that comes back to watermarking. I’m going to watermark all my images, so I can protect in some small way the intellectual copyright on the few really stellar images that I’ve created, and to deter any unsavoury use of the images of with people in them.

What do you think of all this? Are you a purist who is annoyed by the ‘ego’ factor in watermarking photos? Do you think it’s futile to even bother? I’ve seen people argue that by simply putting images online, you are de facto giving up your rights to what happens to them — something I, no surprise, completely disagree with. What do you do to protect your images online? I’d love to hear your opinions on this!

Five things about Great Wolf Lodge

When planning our family vacation this year, it was Great Wolf Lodge that pulled us to Niagara Falls and not the other way around. I’d been hearing rave reviews about GWL from other families for a while, and though I thought it was rather overpriced, when my sister-in-law said she could share her teacher’s discount, it seemed more reasonable. Lucky for us, about a month after we made our reservation I stumbled onto a special offer for 50% off July prices, so we ended up paying about $180 a night — a little steep for your ‘average’ hotel accommodation, but entirely affordable when you factor in the cost of five unlimited-use passes to the best water park we’ve ever visited. (And I do love me a good water park!)

In the end, I have to say that the good points outweighed the bad points, but there were a few things that keep me from raving with satisfaction (is that an oxymoron?) about our experience. Here are five things about Great Wolf Lodge:

1. There is a wide variety of fun water-based activities for just about any age group. There were tiny slides for the littlest ones (Lucas was just an inch or two too short to try them, but my 2 year old niece had a blast) and more than one pool that started out at zero depth with a comfortable grade — perfect for toddlers. There were bigger slides that were perfect for adventurous five- and seven-year-olds (even Simon, who doesn’t like slides at the park, loved these!) and some really big slides that were fun for grown-ups or grown-ups and kids to ride together.

Fountain fun at Great Wolf Lodge

2. They have an excellent wristband security system. Although I was mildly irritated by the constant presence of the wrist band, it more than made up for the irritation with sheer convenience. Not only does the wrist band allow you access to the water park, but it acts as a room key so you just wave your wristband in front of the door lock to let yourself in. Loved it! Also, the wristbands activated the lockers provided in the water park, which I wish I’d known the first and second day we were there — I’d have more in-park pictures if I’d known I could leave my camera somewhere safe and dry! When I asked if I had to put and keep one on Lucas, the desk staff said yes, but that on a daily basis they used the system to reunite separated kids and parents. It was great not to have to worry about room keys, and the kids loved the novelty and independence of being able to unlock the doors themselves.

3. Everything is oriented to kids. In our case, this is a good thing – others might not agree! You can’t get a less-expensive room if you aren’t planning on using the water slides, for example, so Granny and Papa Lou decided not to come with us this year. But they do offer fun things like crafts and stories for the kids, and even the food on site is heavily geared to kiddie tastes. There’s even a kiddie spa on site, but my boys weren’t particularly interested in getting a mani or a pedi.

4. The place is extremely clean and the staff are super-friendly. Maybe even a little too friendly! The constant refrain of “Have a Great Wolf Day!” wears a little thin by the end of the first day. But I have to say, I was impressed when I called down to the desk to ask about on-site first aid. Lucas had seen a life-sized Bob the Builder (literally Lucas-sized) in the gaming arcade and made a beeline for it, not seeing the sharp edge of the air hockey table between him and Bob, and ended up with a nasty bump and cut just milimeters from his eye. I didn’t even see the cut until we were on our way back up to the room, but it was still bleeding almost a half an hour later, so the desk clerk sent up a couple of the lifeguards with first-aid training to take a look at him. He was fine, but I had to laugh when one of the (barely) 20-something girls suggested I hold some ice on his eye for 15 minutes after he fell asleep when he wouldn’t sit still long enough for me to keep an ice pack on him while he was awake.

Great Wolf Lodge

5. This is really the only negative thing I have to say about Great Wolf Lodge, but considering the price, a few more inclusions and amenities would be nice. It was the nickel-and-diming for the extras that most irritated me. For example, the website says “There’s a bunk bed and TV, so they can “rough it” with movies and Nintendo,” but the you had to pay $8 an hour to play the Nintendo. Not that we needed the video games, but I did feel that it was false advertising to insinuate on their website that it was included when there was an extra charge. There was mini-golf on site, but that was an extra fee as well — it would have been $18 just for Tristan, Simon and I to play… about double what we usually pay. And when I asked at the desk on check-in if there was anything special I could do for our ten-year wedding anniversary, the clerk suggested I buy a cake at the bakery down stairs. Not exactly what I’d had in mind. (Heck, even a free round of mini-golf would have been nice!)

My recommendations to improve Great Wolf Lodge? Some nice terry bathrobes in the rooms would be a lovely touch. The cabin theme with the bunks is great for the kids, but other than that the rooms are pretty stark of comforts for the grown-ups. And, a courtesy phone in the water-park area would be much appreciated so one doesn’t have to truck three dripping kids across the lobby to find one. (It would have been easier to simply walk everyone back up to the room!)

In the end, we enjoyed our stay enough that I imagine we’ll be coming back for a return visit, and I’d recommend it to anyone with a high tolerance for noise and chaos. Luckily, with three boys I’m pretty much immune to both by now.

Project 365: Water play

My favourite group on Flickr (365 Community) has a rotating optional theme. This week, I happened to have been tagged to choose the theme. With no hidden agenda whatsover in thinking about our trip to Niagara Falls, I chose the theme “water play”. I managed a few variations on the theme this week!

Before we even left for Niagara Falls, we spent a sunny Sunday morning at the local splash pad. Lucas absolutely loved it!

160:365 At the waterpark

You’ve seen some of these already in my Niagara Falls recap post, but what the heck. This is Tristan admiring the view when we first arrived in Niagara Falls.

162:365 At Niagara Falls

And this is my ultimate Canada Day shot, from the Maid of the Mist. (From a technical perspective, Beloved pointed out that the bit of deck rail in the lower left, the bit of darkness in the upper left and the dark side of the gorge on the right form a nice compositional triangle around the central subjects in the image. Oh, the things you learn from an artist!)

163:365 Happy Canada Day!

The other theme of the week was road-tripping. I like how crisp Lucas is in comparison to the motion blur outside the window behind him. (Not to mention the inherent cute factor of him playing with his dollar-store drawing thingee. He loves those things!)

161:365 Road Trip!

This one was on the trip home. I had my 50mm fixed lens on, and had to lean way forward in my seat to properly frame Tristan in this one. (He’s drawing a Pokémon card, and his hair is still wet from the water park at Great Wolf Lodge.)

163:365 The trip home: Tristan

Seems like I took these last pictures about a hundred years ago! This was taken on my last day before vacation. It’s the US Embassy in Ottawa, and I was trying to contrast the bright mirrored modernity of it with the beauty of the old “tax castle” beside it. I used B&W for this one to try to convey the starkness and unwelcomingness of this building and I liked how the lines on the Embassy pointed to the tax castle, too. It’s an okay image, but I’m still not sure I’m fond of it — it wouldn’t turn out like I was picturing it no matter what I did to it!

158:365 The US embassy in Canada

Finally, when all else fails, you can find a pretty flower to photograph. I planted this clematis three or four years ago and it promptly withered and died. To my surprise, it came up this summer absolutely covered in buds — I actually thought it was a weed at first. He’s the Little Clematis That Could!

159:365 Clematis

Edited to add: I almost forgot! This week was the end of the month, so I’ve got my monthy mosaic done for June. There were some colourful shots this month!!

June mosaic!

Five things I learned in Niagara Falls

We’re freshly back from three days in Niagara Falls. It was a terrific trip for many reasons, including spending time with our extended family and excellent behaviour on the part of all five kids in attendance. Here, in no particular order, are five things I learned in Niagara Falls. (The “five things” bit is a new idea I had. I think it’s a neat new theme with a lot of potential!)

161b:365 Road trip reflection

1. My boys are excellent travelers! Tristan and Simon have long since proved their roadworthiness, but even Lucas – who fusses on the drive to the grocery store – was an angel in the car. On the way home, we drove straight through from Niagara Falls to Ottawa with only one stop (in Belleville, where we stretched and dined at the Quinte Mall.)

161:365 Road Trip!


3. Don’t let the weather forecast get you down.
They were calling for grey skies and rain (and egads, even snow!) in the week leading up to our trip, but the weather was damn near perfect. Cloudy with plenty of sunny breaks, mild enough for shorts but cool enough for walking. It was perfect weather for gazing at the Falls!

162:365 At Niagara Falls

(Or, perfect weather for gazing at each other!)

"Hey Dad, I can't see a thing!"

This is just a gratuitous shot of the Falls because I like it so much!

Niagara Falls


3. You can take 600 pictures of your boys and still not manage to get them to smile nicely once.
Sigh.

More Niagara Falls
.

Simon rocks out

4. The time for the “Thou Shall Not Leave My Line Of Sight” lecture is *before* you arrive at the crazy indoor waterpark, not after. Within the first half hour we arrived, I’d had to scoop up Lucas and run into the deep part of the wave pool to rescue a floundering Simon (the lifeguards hadn’t even noticed him, even though he was crying and flailing) and spend more than half an hour climbing up and down stairs searching the water park for Tristan and Simon, who’d wandered off behind their uncle. The place is so noisy that I’d spot them but couldn’t make them hear me hollering (despite my shrillest voice, which is pretty damn shrill) and they’d’ve moved on by the time I made my way down to where they were.

(This is not an image of my kids drowning or disobeying me, but one of the few times I brought my camera into the water park at Great Wolf Lodge.)

(Edited to add: Found this picture on my back-up memory card, and thought it was cute enough to share! It’s the still photo companion to the video above!)

Fountain fun at Great Wolf Lodge

5. A ride on the Maid of the Mist is an excellent way to spend Canada Day! (I was determined to bring my Nikon with me, but was deeply worried about water damage. In the end, I cut a hole in one corner of a large ziploc freezer bag and trimmed it to the exact size of my lens, then taped the edges to my polarizing filter. Ghetto solution, but it worked!!)

This is the Maid of the Mist from above, approaching the Horseshoe Falls:

Horseshoe Falls at Niagara

And this is the view of the American Falls from the Maid of the Mist:

American Falls

My favourite Canada Day shot:

163:365 Happy Canada Day!

(There may or may not be another post about our trip in the near future. I’m struggling with the “and then we did this, and then we did that” travelogue narrative — it seems a little like torturing you with the verbal equivalent of vacation slides! But if you like the pictures, there’s more on Flickr!)

Ten years ago today, I married my Beloved

Ten years ago today, in a tiny church in London’s Pioneer Village in front of 45 of our best friends and family on the hottest day of the summer, I said these words:

I, Danielle, choose you, Mark, to be my love.
I pledge to you my life, my heart, my hope and my joy.
I promise to love you with my finest kindness and my deepest care.
You are my prince, my knight, my king;
My friend, my jester and my inspiration.
I promise that I will love you always, from this day forward,
Blissfully, joyfully, infinitely.

Ten years ago today, I married my best friend. We had no idea what was in store for us, the joys and the fun and the heartaches and the adventures, but we knew we wanted to do it together.

Ten years ago today, we two joined together to start a new family, and in doing so we linked our families and our histories together.

Ten years seems to have passed in the blink of an eye — and yet it was a lifetime ago. Three lifetimes ago, actually! Tristan’s, Simon’s and Lucas’s.

Ten years ago today, I did the smartest thing I ever did: I married my Beloved. And each year since has been better than the one before.

Happy Anniversary, my love! Happy anniversary, and thank you for the honour of your love.