Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Renos are finally done!


I was checking out this pretty post

Over reading week I came home to a flooded living room. About a month later, I come home to an empty living room with some walls bashed in. Because they found that the source of the flooding was about a meter high in the walls, they had to redo them. Which means that Dana took the opportunity to repaint the entire room! It looks much better now, with the sloppy black trim gone and the brown walls now a pale beige with a hint of yellow. We rearranged the frames too and they look much more cohesive. My favourites are two new prints of historic buildings in Bucharest. Well, new to my apartment, but they were made in 1998. 

Monday, March 25, 2013

Toronto Wildlife



I did a double-take at the library seeing the cover for the novel Fauna, by Alissa York. A book obviously about animals featuring a female character? Sold! And then as I started reading it I realized it was set in Toronto! It's really charming to read about a place you know, or think you know, and this book so far is really making me hope that the characters are based on real people and that they can become my friends.

Then I found out that there's a woman at York with a super impressive resume, which lead me to wonder about volunteering at the Toronto Wildlife Centre.  "Volunteer foster care parents" IS A THING. I am really impatient to see how my summer pans out now so that I can plan for this!



Image source

This could be me holding the bottle! Or you. Or anyone who cares enough to volunteer.  

Saturday, March 23, 2013

She sells sea shells by the sea shore

Image source
Mary Anning was one of the first women palaeontologists, wore top hats, and sold "curiosities". Curiosity, a historical novel by Joan Thomas, drew me with its promise of pre-Darwin theories of evolution and a love story. The love story was disappointing, but the ideas surrounding Mary Anning's life are fascinating.

Mary would sell sea lilies, "snake stones" ammonites, "devil's fingers" belemnites, "verteberries", and other fossils. While hunting for curiosities to sell in her shop, she found the first ichthyosaur skeleton to be properly identified (though at first she thought it might be a dragon) and the first plesiosaurs.


Crystallized ammonite

Ichthyosaur skull

Plesiosaur
Because she was a poor woman, many of her discoveries were forgotten and went unrecognized by European geologists and palaeontologists. But in her home town of Lyme Regis, people told stories about the peculiar woman for generations. The tale would usually start with "she sells sea shells by the sea shore..."

She is now considered to be among the most influential British women in the history of science. There's a great article here.


Friday, March 8, 2013

Poison Seed


Vanada Shiva is my hero. I went to seek her talk four years ago at UW just to fulfill an assignment for my Introduction to Peace and Conflict course. I read a short description of the talk and thought it might be interesting and then I roped my dad into coming with me because I was too shy to show up by myself. Never would I have expected to enjoy it so much. Shiva is the most passionate woman I know, incredibly intelligent and working for an amazing cause. It's tragic to see that all these years later, she's still telling the same story (in the video) as if the situation in India is unchanged.

This post is called Poison Seed as an homage to Blood Diamond. Many parallels can be drawn between the two stories as they are both cases of the rich unknowingly, uncaringly, or helplessly destroying lives of the poor. The food industry is increasingly worrisome, and I am beginning to feel very skeptical about all the ways I can feed myself. If what I eat wasn't ladled with chemicals, it probably still poisoned locals where regulations are more lax for the national market. It's also possible, as Shiva explains, that it forced peasants into bankruptcy and demolished local biodiversity and livelihoods.
BBC News

I recently did a presentation loosely based on the findings from this article: How much does agriculture depend on pollinators? It's worrisome how pollinators are in decline and how many crops depend on them to be fertilized. In the absence of pollinators (due to too much pesticide use and loss of habitat, for instance) much larger areas of cultivation will be required to produce the same yields as before, which means more deforestation which in turn destroys pollinator habitat. Developing countries are more vulnerable than developed ones as they are growing more highly pollinator-dependent crops, responding to rising demand from richer countries. The sad thing is that they are losing traditional seeds that would be resilient to less pollinators. An important issue in India is to promote not only the survival of many varieties of the main crops (wheat and rice) but also to keep alive other food crops which have been not subject to “Green Revolution” seed substitution – like pearl millet, ramdana and sorghum, and also pulses in general (Martinez-Alier, 2002). Pulses and grasses in general self-pollinate or only need wind, therefore keeping these crops alive is important to withstand future changes where pollinators may not exist.

Source
Pollinators are involved in so many complex interrelationships that we might not necessarily think of.

Paddy fields and their surroundings in India contain algae, Azolla, insects, fish, frogs, crabs, birds and other creatures, weeds and trees, all living in webs of interdependence. As long as this “micro-ecosystem” is not interfered with, the natural fertilizing and insect control processes enable a paddy field to yield steadily for thousands of years. Fish eat small aquatic pollinators and insects, including mosquitos and their larvae and other pests. Their droppings provide instant fertilizer. There are about 80 species of insect parasites and predators in rice fields. A large variety of birds also live and feed on paddy field insects. (Sinha, 1997)
Image source
A way of protecting pollinators would be by encouraging marigold crops.
For control of termites, marigolds (Tagets erecta) are often grown. The roots of marigold plants exude a chemical identified as “alpha-terthienyl” which kills the root-feeding namatodes and termites. The marigold flower provides the secondary products of the farm. Marigolds also attract honey bees. This facilitates cross-pollination of other crops such as monoecious plants like watermelon and other cucurbits. They grow better when marigolds are present (Sinha, 1997).
Here's a great video showing the variety colourful food in India and the incredible amount of people, noises, landscapes and movement that is there. Visiting this country must be insanely overwhelming.



French blogger the Cherry Blossom Girl has some inspiring photos from her trip to India, as you can see below.




Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Support Matt's Strike


Before seeing this video, I would have had a hard time answering the "so, who's your celebrity crush?" question. Though Ewan McGregor is up there (perfect balance of sweet, adventurous, bad-ass, nerdy, charming, and sexy)... okay who am I kidding after spending so much time youtubing him he is definitely my top answer. But after Ewan, it's Matt Damon for his Bourne-perfect roughness and his charity work.  

Monday, March 4, 2013

Feeling Congested

I don't have a cold, but I am very irritated by Toronto's transportation in general. When I complained to my montréalais uncle that there were only 2 major subway lines here, his eyes popped out, brow lines went up and his chin jutted out in major disbelief. Yeah, the situation is that dramatic.

Searching for solutions, Jennifer Keesmaat, Toronto's new chief city planner, initiated the feeling congested campaign. Not much interested in transportation planning and pretty skeptical that the situation would change anytime soon, I didn't think much of it until I noticed that the graphic design looked pretty cool so I ended up visiting the site.

Sadly, books aren't the only things I still judge by their covers.
The graphics are awesome. Then somehow I learned about a panel discussion in which Jennifer Keesmaat would participate. "I WANT TO BE HER" is how one of my fellow classmates reviewed her when Keesmaat gave a talk at York last term. And all of the guys were raving about how good-looking she was and how she was wearing hot pink pants. Apparently, these infamous pants were still at the centre of their conversation while they were on a bus and an older man, a complete stranger, leaned over and excitedly said: "You should see her Ted Talk, she wears a mini skirt!!!"

Jennifer Keesmat Chief Planner for City of Toronto. Source
Awww man, did I miss out on something great because I was too lazy? Well not this time! This time I was a good student who does extracurriculars and went!

From left to right: Larry Beasley, Councillor Michael Thompson, Jennifer Keesmaat, Councillor Peter Milczyn, Carol Wilding, John Howe, and CBC Radio One host Matt Galloway. 
The venue was the Jane Mallett theatre, the name of which you could see how I would easily remember, in the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts. Matt Galloway was a great moderator, cutting off the councillors and John Howe (Metrolinx Vice President) to remind them the question they were being asked if they were trying to avoid it.

Larry Beasley had interesting ideas about the need to use all the different types of funding tools we can think of and that Toronto just "needs to get on it" already. No decision is the worst decision they say, especially where every year Toronto waits will require billions of dollars more to fix the transit problem. He also had a theory that in the near future, when cars all run on electricity, there won't be as convincing arguments for deterring car use as there is now (pollution). "We will re-invent the car much faster than we will implement transit options." That's definitely something to think about.

What nagged me was that the discussion didn't seem to have progressed much despite the many consultation sessions that had already occurred. They claimed that the conversation moved from which modes of transportation should be funded to what tools will be used to fund them but that night they also talked about wether local or regional transportation should be prioritized. Galloway asked them a direct question that went something like this: "Now that we've talked a lot, it's time to act. What can Toronto citizens see that will show that the action is beginning?"  The replies were unconvincing.

The last question from a member of the audience was the best. An old greying lady spoke softly into the microphone and restated a stat that had been given earlier, that only about a quarter of Toronto's population was aware that there are major transportation plans being developed. She asked what was being done to educate Toronto citizens about the issues at stake here so that they would be willing to support the funding tools.
John How (Metrolinx): Well we have had all these public meetings and the website and blah blah blah Matt Galloway (Moderator): It's obviously not working.
(audience claps in assent)
Old Lady: Have you considered hiring an advertising team?
(audience laughs, more clapping)
Beasley (Planning academic): You should hire her! What needs to be understood here is that public consultation is not the same thing as educational engagement.

Which is very true, I learned a bit about transportation planning that day, but I am awfully unqualified to give this panel a true analysis. They didn't even list all of very important possible funding tools.

Back to J Kees. Her public speaking skills are fantastic. The photos don't do her justice. She looks gooood! Therefore, I am joining the group of people who want to be her. She's an MES grad from York so I must be on the right track. I'm seriously buying brown tights next time I go shopping, I can at least try to look as presentable as her.

On the subway on the way home, who do I see? Jennifer Keesmaat standing next to me!!! What are the odds?? If you've never met someone you know on the subway, you should. It's one of the most exciting things ever. While I was nervously trying to think of something intelligent to say (all I could think of was "do you have any tips for me as a student planner" which sounded like the most lame thing in the world at the time but at least it would have started a convo) she started talking to a group of men in suits who she seemed to know through work. She was telling them how pleased she was with the councillors' replies and how they said they would get council votes for funding transportation despite the mayor's refusal to raise taxes. It was really cool to hear her opinion on how the panel worked out though it was hard to eavesdrop on everything from where I was.

Sadly, she had to get off the subway too soon. The next thing I hear is a comment from one of the men she was talking to: "She's done more in 6 months than we have in years."

Anna Karenina

"Flawless as a work of art" 
is how Fyodor Dostoevsky describes the novel.  

I was curious about the movie after watching the Oscars and seeing that it won for best costume design.
So I poured myself a mug of tea and sat down to watch it. With the one of the first few words spoken being "bonjour", I immediately thought of Marie-Antoinette.  It's remarkable how much influence France had on so many parts of the world. Then I started realizing that all the action going on in a theatre were not really occurring in a theatre. It was a unique way to travel between scenes. 

This featurette explains that all of the characters were pretending to be someone they were not, French or refined or happy, and that "they were living their lives as if they were on a stage". It made a beautiful movie, especially this dance scene below where the two fall in love.


These days, it appears that Russia is the one inspiring France. Not only was that video posted by a francophone, but I also found an interesting art and fashion post by blogger Pandora with the following photos.







Saturday, March 2, 2013

Maps, maps, wonderful maps

Ahhhhh I found my future ambition! I want to submit a map to this website:
http://www.theydrawandtravel.com

I came across it googling Manuel Antonio National Park that I'll be visiting this May.

Kaitlyn McCane
Aunyarat Watanabe
Esther van den Berg
Nate Padavick
By Jenn Tse. Oooh I need to check out that book shop. A sliding ladder? As in the Beauty and the Beast??