Saturday Snap – The Four Senses

The RPL Staff Day was yesterday. The planning committee skipped this fundraiser last year but this year, gift baskets provided by each unit/branch were part of a silent auction to raise funds for the United Way once again.

The Outreach Unit where I work came up with the idea of a “Four Senses” basket where each of the four staff members would contribute something representing one of the four senses leaving out sight. (Clever, eh?)

I was “sound” so picked up a few noise makers, a toy flute and stuff like that. I hope whoever won our basket especially enjoys the whoopee cushion! 😉

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Friday Fun Link – Theory of Evolution Explained

Such a great video. Every science classroom should view this on day one…

“Binders Full of Women” – The Musical Version

Also this.

Eulogy for Uncle Ken

Shea’s uncle passed away last week, rather suddenly after a year-long battle with cancer (that’s a weird way to describe it but that’s how it went.)

Shea and I were honoured to be asked to do the eulogy by his widow and since we happened to be in Weyburn last weekend, we were able to go out to Creelman to hear some stories from Ken’s family to help me write it.  (This was useful as I didn’t know him nearly as well as the three other family members I’ve been able to eulogize in the past.)

Eulogy for Ken Thompson

There are a lot of ideas about what the true purpose of life is.  Some believe we’re on this planet to make as many friends as we can or to make as much money as possible.  Some think that we need to accomplish something that will leave a legacy and some think that the best legacy a person can leave is their family.

No matter what you believe the purpose of life to be, one thing that will help you to succeed is if you approach life as something to be enjoyed.  And in talking with his family the past week and hearing many of the stories about him, it’s very clear that Ken was somebody who not only enjoyed life but helped the people around him enjoy life too.

For example, Elsie shared the story of how her and Ken met.  She was on a date with someone else and they went to pick up Ken who didn’t have his license at the time.  She was immediately attracted to Ken who was clearly a much more interesting, fun-loving fellow than her “boring” date.

And when you talk about enjoying life, there’s perhaps no better example than the story of Ken, making sure that James, Deana and Marsh got rides in a helicopter when a seismic crew operated out of their farm when the kids were younger.  I’m sure the kids all looked like this but the pilot said it was Ken’s eyes that were the most like saucers during his ride!

Enjoying life can mean enjoying specific things and Ken really enjoyed…ice water.  (You thought we were going to say something else, didn’t you?)  But many of Ken’s funniest stories seem to involve ice water – from the time he decided to waterski – not too long after the ice had melted on a northern lake.  Joan says she’d never seen someone actually turn blue before but she saw it that time!

And we all know how much Ken loved ice fishing.  He loved it so much he would stay out right to the very end of the season.  Deana remembers the story of being with her dad and his truck starting to go through the ice.  He calmly told her to stand on the seat and not get wet from the rising water while he went to get someone to pull the truck out of the ice.  (She also remembers being told *not* to tell her mom about that so perhaps Elsie wouldn’t have thought of that as an enjoyable experience in the same way that Ken and Deana did.)

James has many fond memories of hunting with his dad.  Ken never turned down a hunting trip and was known to be a great shot who even bagged two beer, sorry, I mean, *deer* with a single bullet one time!

We slipped up in that last section when we said “beer” instead of “deer” but it was an honest mistake as Ken’s love of beer was well-known.  Many of his most memorable stories involve beer – whether it was Dennis telling of the night Ken got left behind in the bar while they were living in Calgary.  Ken had to walk many miles home, arriving just in time to watch Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon.  I guess you could say that was “one small step for man, one giant hike for Ken!”

Ken enjoyed visiting Stoughton Bar.  One time he enjoyed it so much that him and a buddy ended up getting in the wrong car and since the keys were in the ignition, bringing that one home instead of Elsie’s!  When Elsie arrived home, she asked Ken where her car was and only then did he realise what had happened.  A quick trip back to town, a swap was made and the owner of the other car was never the wiser.

Jason and I have a favourite story about Ken and beer as well.  When we got married in Creelman, a friend in Calgary who worked at a brewery offered us a free keg.  Uncle Ken was so excited, he showed up at mom and dad’s farm with a mug that can only be described as keg-sized!

Unfortunately, the beer we’d been given was not his cherished Molson Canadian and it was pretty clear it didn’t agree with him.  On the other hand, Joan’s flower bed bloomed particularly well the following year!

Although Ken loved his beer, that shouldn’t define him in our memories.  He also loved camping and fishing and hunting as well as all the time spent over many years farming with Lloyd and more recently with James.  He was extremely mechanical and could fix anything.  He loved to tease people and especially kids.  The first thing Marsh and I both said when asked for stories about Ken was how he always told us we were having “gopher meat” when we had supper at his house, no matter what Elsie was actually serving (although I have to say Elsie always made great tasting gopher meat!)  He traveled often with many hunting and camping trips north. He lived in Calgary visited BC and California and even took a trip to Hawaii as a young man although we suspect if he hit the beach, it was in jeans and cowboy boots!

They say that you don’t truly enjoy life until you realise how short it can be.  Although Ken had lived a full, enjoyable life, in some ways, the last year after he got his cancer diagnosis when he really embraced life in a new way.  He booked a seasonal site at Moosomin Regional Park and bought a pontoon boat which he enjoyed immensely.

We started off by saying that there are a number of things that people think are the purpose of life.  Ken accomplished many of them.  He had numerous friends, many of whom knew him as “Jackpine”.  He wasn’t a millionaire (at least as far as I know!) but he always had enough money to raise his family, buy a case of beer and, after his mineral rights came in a few years back, spend money a bit more freely.  It’s true there won’t be any statues erected to his legacy (unless Molson realises they’ve lost a great customer) but Ken does leave a legacy in terms of his family who will carry his memory with them going forward.

Life is short.  The minute you’re born, you begin dying and you never know how much time you have.  Ken’s life is a reminder that we all need to enjoy the time that we have, the experiences we’re offered and the people we get to share it with.

Here’s to Ken…

Google Street Views Now Allows You To View Underwater Locations Including Two In Hawaii

Google Street View (Ocean View?) now allows you to “swim” through various underwater locations including Hanauma Bay on Oahu where I fell in love with snorkeling as a kid and Molokini Crater which was one of many highlights during our Hawaii trip last January.


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@ryanMeili Monday – Fun with Finances #skndpldr

(I don’t think there was any question about who I’m supporting but just to be sure I “outed” myself as Ryan’s Social Media Director today . With that said, I stick by my original disclaimer from the start of the race that, although I’ve been up front about my biases, I see this blog is an independent entity where I can share my own thoughts and ideas. I may be complimentary – or critical – of all the candidates, including my own. But again, my posts on this blog are not to be taken as the official position of the Meili campaign.)

Well, the first financial reports for the Sask NDP leadership race are out and, like the social media results at the start of the race, you could make a case that each of the candidates is doing the best in one way or another.

Cam Broten has raised the most and also tweeted earlier today that he’s made the most from donors giving less than $250. (Info about donors under $250 isn’t disclosed so I was temporarily confused. But his team clarified that if you take the total raised and subtract the amount disclosed that’s been raised from >;$250 donors, you can discover who raised the most from low dollar donors. There’s no way to figure this but it’d also be interesting to know how *many* low dollar donors each campaign has. To put another way, I’d rather than 10 $10 donors than one $200 donor even though the latter means you’ve made more – at least initially.)

Cam’s in the lead in a couple ways but you could spin each of the other candidates as “winning” as well. Trent Wotherspoon has reached out to the most businesses/organizational donors so far and perhaps some would consider spending the most as a “win” too though I don’t agree.

Erin Weir (tangent: my muscle memory makes me type “weird” every single time I type Erin’s last name. So if that ever slips through as a typo, no harm intended and I’m not subliminally trying to imply he’s weird- honest! In all honesty, Erin is growing on me every time I hear him speak!) has the highest average per >;$250 donor.

Meanwhile, Ryan Meili is the candidate who’s least reliant on self-funding his campaign, either through a personal donation or funding by high-level campaign team members and family members which I think is a really good sign for his future prospects.

On that note, Broten, Meili and Weir each got about half their first month’s take from just three donors (in Broten’s case, three who are all obviously closely involved with the campaign – two people named Broten including Cam plus his campaign manager.) Trent actually got a whopping 3/4 of his take from his three top donors!

Still on that note, two of the four candidates – Trent and Erin – both gave their campaigns the $5000 max donation within the first month (Cam gave himself $2000 and Ryan only donated $557.37 as an in-kind donation to his own campaign) which also means Trent or Erin won’t be donating further – although presumably surrogates such as spouses or family members can and will still donate.

Just for speculation, had Ryan given another $4500 so he was at the maximum just as Trent and Erin did, his total would’ve been $17 700, good for second place on the list behind Broten (of course, if Broten had maxed out, he’d also have been a really dominant position as the first campaign to crack $20 000, although, again, that’s with the “three insiders as top donors” caveat I stated earlier.)

What else jumped out? I guess the huge deficit that Trent Wotherspoon rang up within the first month was a bit of a surprise. I knew he’s been putting on a lot of miles traveling to all corners of the province [edit: and had a really glitzy launch] but I’m not sure if deficit spending is the way to go, especially when we’re a party that’s constantly attacked (unfairly) for not being able to control our finances. [Edit: Someone has already tweeted about the SaskParty must be salivating to see the NDP Finance Critic ring up such a huge debt!]

And spending nearly double what you took in looks pretty extravagant to my eyes. Of course if the big spending strategy pays off by giving him an air of inevitability and allows him to attract more and more money as the race gets near the end, it will have paid off. But personally, I think that’s a risky strategy if it doesn’t work out that way and Trent (and by extension, party members who can expect ongoing appeals to help retire his debt) will be burdened with a big debt at the end of this as has been the case in other leadership races (hello Brian Topp!)

Same with Erin Weir – for an economist, I was surprised to see him playing it so close to the line with expenditures equal to 97% of his income.

Cam wins the contrib:expenses ratio metric too – having spent 57% of his contributions where Ryan comes in second having spent 63% of his contributions.

Final observation – I talked above how Ryan would be in second place for fundraising if he’d contributed the maximum (Cam’s in first place whether he donated $2000 or $5000.) But if you flip this and *remove* candidate self-contributions from their totals, a different picture emerges. If you don’t count what candidates provided as seed money, Ryan’s still in second place…

Cam Broten – $17 700
Ryan Meili – $12 600
Trent Wotherspoon – $10 400
Erin Weir – $9 700

And this is really hard to figure as I don’t know all the names of all the donors and their roles but if you take out people who are obviously family and/or top-level campaign people, Ryan’s in the lead and Cam drops to a near-tie with Trent.

(Did I mention off the top that you could spin these results to say anything you want?)

Anyhow, it’s a long race and with Trent and Erin having maxed out their donations already, you have to wonder where they go from here? I think the most interesting results of the race might actually be next month’s – those will show where the real momentum is after the initial funding from the candidates and their strongest supporters is removed from the equation.

Felix Baumgartner Record-Setting Freefall Skydive

I wasn’t one of the millions watching the record setting freefall  by Felix Baumgartner live today.  But even watching the highlights video below took my breath away.

Before you watch that video, here’s some highlights from this guy’s other previous jumps around the world to whet your appetite.

Now watch this one.  Humans are truly amazing creatures sometimes…

Saturday Snap – One Word to Describe Each #skndpldr Candidate (and the Past Leader Each Most Resembles)

We’re in Weyburn this weekend visiting Shea’s family and had to make a visit to Creelman today since her uncle has just passed away and his wife has asked me to do the eulogy.

Since I was already halfway there, I decided to carry on to Arcola where, in addition to the Cannington NDP AGM, three of the four NDP Leadership candidates would be appearing. (I sometimes feel like I’ve attended as many political events in Weyburn and area as I have in Regina including this memorable moment – make sure you click that last link!)

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There are lots of things I could talk about in this post – from how much I love small towns (especially ones I got to work in as part of my work as Branch Supervisor with Southeast Regional Library) to the impact of the resource boom in southeast Saskatchewan to how, between Shea and I, it often feels like we’re pretty much connected to every small town in this area of the province through our family, friends and our work.

But instead, I want to focus on some of my thoughts about the candidates who were at the Cannington AGM. Unfortunately, Cam Broten wasn’t able to make it but it was nice to hear the other three candidates shared a car pool down to Arcola (oh, to be a fly on the wall in that car!) and then to hear them speak in what was, in many ways, a mini-preview of the upcoming Leadership Forums.

It got me thinking about a couple different things. If I had to summarize the candidates in a single word, which word would I pick? And if I had to compare them to a past NDP Leader, who would it be?

Of course, these are only my thoughts and I’m sure many (including the candidates themselves – and even my preferred candidate) might disagree with my characterization. But this is my take…

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Cam Broten – (I’ve written before that he’s the candidate I know least about but maybe the word to describe him is “balanced” and the leader he therefore most resembles is Roy Romanow?)

Ryan Meili – Visionary (Tommy Douglas)

Erin Weir – Intelligent (and I mean, like crackling whip smart intelligent) (Allan Blakeney)

Trent Wotherspoon – Friendly (Comparing him to a past leader is a tough one as I can see elements of different past leaders from Lorne Calvert to Dwain Lingenfelter in Trent. Perhaps he’s like this strange amalgam of the two with a dash of Romanow as well?)

 

I Win The #skndpldr Membership Sweepstakes

I just sold an NDP membership to this guy!

(The guy on the right. If I could swing a sale to the guy on the left, I’d be running for NDP Leader myself!)

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Ryan vs. Ryan: A Political Dichotomy #skndpldr

Such a strange dichotomy…

Tonight, I witnessed two young men named Ryan, both Catholic, both firm of their convictions, both political stars on the rise, in two different political events.

One is Paul Ryan, the VP candidate for the Republican ticket in the US who was in a televised debate tonight. This Ryan is an acolyte of Ayn Rand, thinks 30% of the entire US population are “takers” and his only medical qualifications are as a “Dr. No” on budget matters.

The other is Ryan Meili, candidate for the leadership of the Saskatchewan NDP who held a successful meet & greet in Regina tonight. This Ryan is inspired by people like Dr. Paul Farmer, he has has all but dedicated his life to serving the less fortunate and he is an actual practicing medical doctor (as well as a published author, community activist and much more.)

I’m so glad I get to support the better Ryan. You should too!