Music Monday – “Book flight December but I leave in May/Drugs are generic but still work the same/I get logins for Netflix from my cousin Greg/Thanks Greg!”

You know that experience when you learn a new word or buy a new vehicle or whatever and after never noticing it before, you suddenly see it everywhere?

I had a recent experience except it was with a YouTube rap star.  A friend of mine in the States who’s a teacher posted a pic with “Lil Dicky” who had returned to his alma mater where my friend teaches.  Then I saw Mr. Dicky’s new video was trending on Facebook’s News Feed.  Then I saw him on my Reddit front page.

In our “viral” age, this isn’t unusual for memes to come into your consciousness all at once but I just thought it was cool that this one started with a pic posted by a buddy.

$ave Dat Money” – Lil Dicky

A Look at the Log Files…

I haven’t done a navel-gazing post for awhile so I thought it’d be interesting to list which of my blog posts have had the most views during this year along with the date that they were originally published…

  1. How To Make A Rye & Coke Press (Dec 2006)
  2. Myers-Briggs Results as Cultural Touchstones (Oct 2013)
  3. Ranking the Top 10 Milestones of a Person’s Life (Aug 2012)
  4. 10 Similarities Between Sports & Religion (Sep 2010)
  5. Top 10 Things I Use As A Bookmark (Jan 2013)
  6. Our New rPod 182g Ultralight RV (Sep 2014)
  7. Eulogy for Uncle Ken (Oct 2012)
  8. Good Morning Vietnam: An “Un-War” War Movie (Aug 2014)
  9. Saskatchewan Songs (Sep 2006)
  10. An Unofficial Guide to UWO FIMS Library School (Sep 2006)

Random observations…

  • List posts are hit posts
  • September 2006 is the only month that hits my Top 10 list twice.
  • I think a common theme to probably half of these posts is people looking for unique information that’s hard to find elsewhere online – from how to make a drink that’s fairly unique to the prairies to how to write a eulogy for an uncle to facts about a certain RV model to insight into a specific University program
  • Not one “Theme” post makes the list – no Music Monday, Throwback Thursday, Friday Fun or Saturday Snap.  If I were trying to make this blog more popular or including ads, I’d probably have to look seriously at doing away with those theme days.

Saturday Snap – “My BIRD!”

I was shaving the other day while Sasha was watching when she suddenly started saying “My bird!  My BIRD!”

I thought her new toothbrush had tweety bird on it or something but then realised she was saying “My beard!” and asking for shaving cream of her own.

Then Pace heard us laughing so he had to get in on the action too!

My Beard

Friday Fun Link – The Geocities-izer

GeoCities Version of Head Tale Blog

This web page allows you to make any site look like you designed it in 1998 using GeoCities

(via Reddit)

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – New Computer System @OfficialRPL #yqr (February 2010)

RPL is moving to a new ILS over the coming week which reminded me of the last move we had five years ago…

Bear With Us

10 “Must Have” Things I Look For In An All-Inclusive Resort

Shea and I have been on a handful of all-inclusive vacations over the years.  Every place has had its good and bad points but overall, these varied trips to Mexico (Mazatlan, Mayan Riviera, Cancun), Cuba (Varadero) and most recently, the Dominican Republic (Punta Cana), have given me a pretty good idea of some of the things I prefer in an all-inclusive…

10 Things I Look For in an All-Inclusive in no Particular Order (along with which resort the photo shows in brackets)…

  1. Great Pools (preferably multiple)
    The Grand Palladium Bavaro in the Dominican Republic is one we’ve stayed at which had great pools.  We especially enjoyed the one with a lowered edge at the side where we could sit on deck chairs right in the water and where the kids could glide right into the pool!   The Infinity Pool at the Riu Cancun was cool too.
    (Grand Palladium Bavaro)
  2. Decent, non-repetitive food
    Food in all-inclusives can run the gambit from blah to pretty good.  The main thing is having lots of options so you can mix it up from day-to-day.  Some resorts have “theme nights” which helps add variety too.
    (Cuban resorts don’t have a great reputation for food but we went to the Iberostar Varadero over New Year’s and they put on an amazing feast – steak, lobster (which you often have to pay extra for) and more …)
  3. Beautiful beach
    We’ve been to resorts where the shore is being reclaimed so there are enormous concrete slabs in the water just off-shore – yikes!   Or on the Pacific coast of Mexico where there were stories of raw sewage being pumped into the ocean – eww!
    (Varadero Beach is possibly our favourite beach of all-time.)
  4. Cool, unique bars
    We’ve stayed in a couple all-inclusives that had piano bars, others that had great views or cool designs.
    (Blau Varadero) 
  5. Kid’s Club
    It’s best to find one with lots of activities, scheduled and otherwise.  Although we tend not to utilize these options to their full extent when we go preferring to spend time with our kids instead of dumping them off, it’s nice to have the option available.  (A good kid’s pool/water park is cool too although we’ve never been to a resort that has a full-on water park with (big) slides, wave pool, lazy river, etc.)   (Iberostar Varadero)
  6. Ocean View Room
    This has been more common in the hotel-style resorts we’ve stayed at than the villa-style.  You don’t tend to spend a lot of time in your room anyhow but it’s nice to be able to see the ocean (or sleep with patio doors open listening to the waves) when you do.
    (Oceano Palace, Mazatlan)

  7. A La Carte Restaurants
    Most resorts feature an assortment of a la carte restaurants that you can book ahead early in your stay or (less likely) wait in line for the same day.  These can give you a range of different cuisines and help break up the monotony of the buffets.  Some highlights from my past stays include a Brazilian style restaurant, a Japanese teriyaki place, a tapas bar, an outdoor Italian grotto (this is where we had our wedding reception actually).
    (Iberostar Varadero)
  8. Wi-Fi 
    Yeah, I know – you don’t go on holiday to keep up with Facebook and e-mail.  But in our wired age, it can be useful to have wifi to check everything from Wikipedia for info about an attraction you’re going to visit to letting the kids have some down time with YouTube in the evening before bed.
    (WiFi can be spotty where ever you go but it’s also getting better everywhere – the resort we stayed at most recently in the Dominican Republic wasn’t supposed to have in-room Internet but we ended up being able to get online.  Cuba has the worst reputation for Internet but even Cuba’s resorts are increasingly offering Internet – though you pay for it by the hour and it’s apparently not much better than using dial-up!)
  9. Nearby City/Attractions
    This isn’t a must-have but I’ve often enjoyed the resorts that were located within a decent-sized, tourist friendly city (Mazatlan, Cancun), ones where you could check out a different city as a daylong excursion (Varadero, Playa Del Carmen, Havana) or ones that nearby attractions (Aztec pyramids, ruins, islands, etc.) over ones where you felt like your only option was to stay at the resort all week (although that’s fun too but if I’m in a foreign country, I’d like to get a little taste of the local culture too!)
    (Mazatlan Central Market)
  10. Swim-up Bar
    We haven’t had a swim-up bar at every resort we’ve gone too but they’re definitely one of the things I enjoy the most – nothing like sitting in the middle of a swimming pool in the tropics drinking a pina colada!
    (Grand Palladium Punta Cana)

Bonus: Five Things I’d Like To Try At An All-Inclusive In The Future…

  1. Swim-up suite
    Often these types of rooms are “no kids allowed” so not sure when I’ll get the chance.
    (Grand Palladium Bavaro)
  2. Overwater Suite
    It’s rare in the Caribbean but a room built right over the water would be pretty cool!
  3. Personal Assistant
    Flip side of the last one, I’d love to try the very unique Franklyn D. resort in Jamaica that assigns you a personal assistant as part of your vacation package.  The assistant does a variety of tasks including looking after your kids if you want while you go for a meal with your partner or whatever!
    (Franklyn D. Resort)
  4. Water Park
    As mentioned above, I’d love to try a resort with a full water park.  Seems counter-intuitive when you have the ocean but a nice option, especially with kids.
    (Sandos Caracol Aqua Park)
  5. Atlantis 
    This mega-resort in the Bahamas just seems like the best all-around family resort out there.

Bonus #2 – Five Amenities I Never Use 

  1. The free diving lesson in the pool is something I never get to even though every resort offers it.  Always feels like it’d be a time share presentation as they’d show you a couple things to try then try to sell you diving tours.
  2. Gyms.  Trust me, I don’t go to all-inclusives to exercise! 😉
  3. I also never use tennis courts/basketball courts/archery courses/bike rentals – not because I don’t want to do these things but more because, unlike sitting on a beach, they are things I can do at home.
  4. It’s not that I never use the nightly entertainment shows most resorts offer – it’s just that I find them very “take it or leave it” – some are great (a Michael Jackson impersonator in Cancun) and some are pretty cheesy.  At the same time, I like resorts that have informal entertainment – a band playing in the lunch buffet room, dance music by the pool, live music in the lobby bar in the early evening.
  5. All resorts will have water, pop and beer in your in-room fridge but we stayed at one resort (Riu Cancun) that had hard liquor dispensers in the room.  Sounds great except it was cheap local brands that tasted like paint thinner so I had a couple drinks from it the first night and never used it again!

Stitching the Gimmick: A Short Documentary

The unsung behind-the-scenes people (music composers, video editors, etc.) help make pro wrestling what it is.

Here is a documentary about a seamstress who makes some of the wrestlers’ elaborate costumes…

Stitching The Gimmick | Documentary Short from Taylor Ellis on Vimeo.

Music Monday – “Leaving my pennies on the track/Can’t say if I’m ever coming back”

A British guy I know (in the Facebook sense of “We’ve never met but yeah, we know each other because of our common interest in Fred Eaglesmith) who works as a tour manager for various bands posted this recently.

Beautiful…

Applewood Road” – Emily Barker, Amber Rubarth and Amy Speace

Secular Sunday – God Responds to Aurora Shootings

This was a comment posted in response to a Christian minister’s CNN article explaining where god was during the Aurora shootings…

Saturday Snap – It Was Twenty Years Ago Today… Looking Back to My Four-Month University Exchange to York, England

Hard to believe but twenty (!) years ago today, I took off from Regina, Saskatchewan and landed in Paris, France, a couple weeks before I was set to begin a one semester exchange in York, England (where I took three courses including a Film Production class that gives us the slightly un-PC clip at the top of this post)…

With my tongue only slightly-in-cheek, I often think of those four months as the single greatest stretch of my life.  Why?

  • I was young, unattached and with very few cares in the world (Kids?  Job? Mortgage?  Decades in the future!)
  • I had traveled widely in North America with my parents growing up.  But this was was my first time experiencing a (slightly) different culture and different continent for the first time in my life (but fortunately one that still spoke English which made the adjustment *much* easier!)
  • I was flush with cash having worked a summer job that ended up paying me, after commissions and saved per diems, more on an hourly basis than I earn today, two degrees and twenty years later!
  • I happened to arrive at the height of the “Cool Britannia” movement.
  • I ended up on a floor in the college dorms that had 18 women and exactly *one* other guy!  (Although I didn’t take advantage of that nearly as much as I should – I still regret hearing one floormate drunkenly told me “Oh, I fancy you, Jason” at the Student Union Pub about two weeks before I was scheduled to leave! 🙁
  • The college I was at had a high number of exchange programs with Universities around the world so I got to meet exchange students from Germany, Japan and (mostly) the US.  (We were the only Canadian University to send students.)
  • It was a great program where I paid my tuition and dorm fees here and someone did at the college there and we basically swapped places so you didn’t have to pay exorbitant foreign student fees like some exchange students do.

Anyhow, as I look back, I realised I’ve basically told the story of this exchange a couple times already.  So instead, I thought I’d go back to my journal from that first month in Paris/London/York and share some highlights…

  • U of Regina sent five exchange students – one went a month early, two showed up the weekend before school started and myself and a female exchange student ended up traveling together a couple weeks before school was scheduled to start.
  • We spent a week in Paris, a week in London then made our way to York.
  • She had to go through Manchester because she thought she’d save money by carrying an extra suitcase then shipping it from Paris to York.  Turns out she spent more to do that then I did to ship a suitcase directly from Canada to York AND she had to go out of her way to pick it up while I had mine waiting for me in the Security Guard’s quarters when I arrived at the college.
  • At the time, the French franc was trading at 3.5 Francs to $1 CND.  (Obviously, with the switch to the Euro, I have no idea how this compares today.  I do know a Euro is worth .67 of a Canadian dollar as I type this.)
  • My Louvre admission was 40 francs (about $11.50 Canadian)
  • Eiffel Tower admission was 55 francs (about $16)
  • My limited French was enough to inform me that the VHS movies in a department store had different titles.  One I noted was “Home Alone” which became “Momma, I Missed The Plane” 🙂
  • Ticket in the Chunnel (which had only opened the year before) from Paris to London was 350 francs ($100)
  • The British pound was trading at £.48 for 1 Canadian Dollar (It’s £.49 today – how wild that twenty years later, the ratio is basically exactly the same?) 
  • I basically used traveller’s cheques to get local currency everywhere I went as this was easier than trying to find ATM machines which weren’t as common back then and also, I wasn’t sure how well my Saskatchewan-based Credit Union debit card would work, even if I found an ATM.  (I later used it regularly in York and even during a trip to Amsterdam so my worries were maybe over blown?)
  • It’s incredibly mind-blowing to think that a restaurant where I had what I documented as a “fairly plain chicken sandwich” is not only still open but because of the magic of the Internet, I can see their menu, photos of the place (and have a chuckle that their GarfunkelsUK Instagram handle actually looks like “GarfunkelSUK” at first glance) and if I looked hard enough, probably all kinds of other stuff too – reviews, videos, I could Like their Facebook page, follow them on Twitter, etc.!
  • Bought £5 standing room only ticket to see “Starlight Express” which I thought was a pretty sweet deal, especially considering the standing room was right by the “stage” and my traveling companion and I could’ve literally reached out and tripped the performers as they skated by!
  • While doing laundry in my London hostel, I get talking to another traveller from New Zealand.  She says she nannied in Vancouver then traveled across Canada with someone she met via a ride share board to Montreal.  I say I’m from Regina and she says they drove past it since they wanted somewhere cheaper.  And believe it or not, that leads to a realization that they’d stopped at the motel in Indian Head where I grew up.  What a crazy coincidence!  (I also apologized to her for how shitty and terrible the motel is in IH even if it was cheaper than staying in the city!)
  • Wow – the Maple Leaf Pub is still open too.  As a proud ex-pat, I had to stop there for lunch one day!
  • Buckingham Palace Tour was £8.50 – about $17.
  • Ate a burger at the Hard Rock Cafe and panicked when I got back to Canada and heard about the Mad Cow Disease outbreak which started in England in 1995 (probably ate a lot of other beef during the four months I was in England too but the Hard Rock burger always stood out in my mind as the one that would give me the disease if I caught it for some reason!)
  • We’d gone our separate ways for the day but ended up bumping into the person I was traveling with at Piccadilly Circus – another crazy coincidence although I guess not surprising that two tourists would end up at the same tourist hotspot independently
  • Met another traveler at my hostel in York who’d was from Switzerland but had been to a pow-wow at Fort Qu’Appelle.  (Makes you wonder what happened to all the people you have these random passing encounters with?)
  • I estimated that I spent about $50 CND/day during my first two weeks.  That included hostels, food and all tourist attractions.  So those Europe on $50/day books seem to be onto something! 😉
  • This was my permanent address in England once I got to my college…
    • Jason Hammond
      #10 Lower New Corridor
      Lord Mayor’s Walk
      York, England
      Y03 7EX
  • I budgeted $100 for film developing which is how we did it in the old days, kids!  (13 rolls of film at $8/roll)  At 24 photos per roll, that’s just over 300 photos during four months.  (Some kids today probably take that in a week with their fancy smart phones!)
  • I was pleasantly surprised that the library at my UK college used the same catalogue software as I used at U of R!
  • I got bumped from “American Studies” (was trying to pick classes that wouldn’t be too hard so I could focus more on other things such as traveling and partying!) and ended up in “Theology in Film & Literature” which, in hindsight, is/was a weird choice for an atheist to make.  I think it just worked best for my schedule.  Plus I got to write an essay about how Robin Williams’ character in “Good Morning Vietnam” was a Christ-figure so that was fun.
  • Funny going to the bar/pubs with the American exchange students, many of whom were under 21 so had never been to any place that served alcohol
  • I observed that the only things I found cheaper in the UK than in Canada were beer, chocolate bars and Dr. Marten’s shoes!

Okay, that’s enough of a trip down memory lane for now.  Wow – twenty years.  That’s just unreal to me to think it’s been that long.  I’ve obviously been on big trips since then but they’ve all been in North America and/or to hot vacation destinations in the Caribbean or whatever.

When I left England I swore I’d be back but I never would’ve guessed it would take more than twenty years for that to happen (and who knows if it ever will?  One co-worker took her family including two teenaged boys to England for six weeks and it cost *thousands* of dollars.)

Man, one big regret of my life is not doing more traveling when I was young, carefree and didn’t mind sleeping in multi-person hostel rooms for twenty bucks a night! 😉  Of course among my friends who traveled a *ton* – around the world and taught English in Japan and lived in Australia and all that stuff?  They still have the same regret that they didn’t travel enough which reminds me of how hard it is to define what “enough” is.

On that note, I guess the flip side is that I got an amazing opportunity at an amazing time in my life which many people never have – to travel to another continent, to see a few different countries (because there were so many international students at my college, we had a dedicated office which set-up many trips for us – around England and beyond.  So in addition to getting to see France when I arrived, I also got to Scotland, Amsterdam and to see every “big old thing” within a two hours’ drive of York!) 😉