Friday 12 June 2015

Sorting & reviewing

Dad made these wooden boxes. 

Dad made these items. Who would like to have them?

Did this little jug belong to Granny? Who will look after it now?

Do you remember who gave this to Mum?

My sisters and I are sorting our late mother’s possessions.

One of Mum & Dad's squirrels. 

Since my latest return to Canada at the end of April, a major focus has been helping my siblings sort the contents of our late mother's house. We have made a number of trips to the farm where our parents lived for most of their 61 years of marriage and our mother lived alone for 5 more years. 


Apple blossoms in May.
Peonies in June. 
On each trip to the countryside this spring we have appreciated seeing the birds and the squirrels our parents enjoyed. 


We have delighted in the sight and scent of trees and flowers in bloom, both the wild ones and those in Mum's garden. 



However, the house where we grew up is now nearly empty and virtually unrecognizable. We carry away photographs and furnishings that will remind us of our parents and gifts we gave them over the years. We hope these items will help us retain some of the warmth of our family home as we knew it. 


Gift I got my parents Summer 1967 when I worked in Jasper National Park.

I try not to take much and only small items as I have nowhere to put anything large. I have been downsizing the past 5 years since my husband’s passing, our son’s moving out with friends, and my relocation to a small apartment then to a nomadic life once I retired. 


Starting to fill my storage unit October 2011.

One sister suggested I may have been downsizing much of my life as I have had frequent moves over the years, several of them across continents.

As my son is relocating to British Columbia this summer I am on standby to assist him with his move. Finally, I plan further sorting of my own treasures, in storage nearly 4 years.


Too many boxes.
Searching through my storage unit for seasonal clothing or other items I need is inconvenient and I know the unit still contains a good deal that is unnecessary. Books, mementos and my genealogy files are the hardest problems to solve. 



How much can we recycle?
In recent years I have appreciated no longer having a house and yard to maintain. I have enjoyed travelling light and plan to live as minimalist a life style as I can. Wish me luck.

Tuesday 9 June 2015

Boiling up a pot of memories


Rhubarb relish ingredients ready to boil.

Back in my home province of Alberta, my sister and I are chopping rhubarb and onions. We are makimg rhubarb relish, which our mother and grandmother used to make and several of our siblings still do. 

Soon the kitchen is filled with the scent of spicy, sweet vinegar and the sounds of the relish bubbling in one pot and our jars bouncing as they are sterilized in another pot.

Well used Purity cook book with rhubarb relish recipe.


The recipe our mother and grandmother used comes from the Purity cook book, published by Purity Flour Mills in various editions since the 1930s. The book has been a reliable reference in Canadian kitchens since then.

We use a modified recipe with more rhubarb to the given amount of sugar and improvise with the spices.

Jars of rhubarb relish for the months ahead.


After filling the jars to store on the cold room shelves, we have some relish left and sample with bread and cheese for lunch – delicious.

Our relish is great with bread and cheese.


Rhubarb has been valued as an early fruit on the Canadian prairies since the start of European settlement. Ours has been harvested from our late mother’s garden, increasing its value to us. 


Rhubarb is ready for harvest in the spring. 





Thursday 4 June 2015

Trekking on


Vulcan, Alberta has unique tourist information signs. 

Travelling from the Edmonton area to Southern Alberta I often make a stop in the prairie town of Vulcan, just an hour from my usual destination of Lethbridge. In Vulcan I visit the Tourism and Trek Station near the highway. 

Vulcan's Tourism and Trek Station.

Visitors from all across North America and numerous more distant countries have signed the guest book at the Station, developed on the Star Trek theme. Even years ago we would stop at the town’s model of the Starship Enterprise. 

Vulcan's Starship Enterprise model. 

I have enjoyed Star Trek since my children were young. In fact my younger son heard plenty of Star Trek episodes while in utero.

A drive through Vulcan shows a prosperous community, apparently a turn-around accomplished largely through a marketing campaign based on its name coinciding with that of a fictional planet from the Star Trek televison and movie series.

Roddenberry memorial at Tourism and Trek Station.

Vulcan was the Roman name of the god of fire, first described in Greek mythology. The Alberta town was named by a Canadian Pacific Railway surveyor. The most famous citizen of the planet Vulcan is, of course, Spock, played by actor Leonard Nimoy.

Poster from 2010 visit of actor Leonard Nimoy.

Last month on my latest stop I also saw, for the first time, the town’s bust of actor Leonard Nimoy in his role as Spock. Other visitors had left candles and small stones acknowledging the actor’s death on February 27, 2015.


Bust of late actor Leonard Nimoy as the Vulcan Spock. 

I will leave you with Nimoy’s widely reported, last tweet, from shortly before his passing: “A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. Live Long and Prosper.” 

Live long and prosper.