Sunday, 3 March 2019

More about egg yolks (March 6)


Can I be silent for that long?

                                    by Robert LaFrance

            On Saturday, March 16, Perth Elks, of whom I have been a proud member since 1978, will be holding a Silent Auction followed by our St. Patrick’s dinner and, while the dinner for members and guests is no problem for me (oink), the Silent Auction has been on my mind.
            You see, I can’t remain silent for any longer than about four minutes and I didn’t want to embarrass my brother and sister Elks.
            While thinking about this in the past few hours, I have been gathering up items to donate to the auction whose aim is to raise money for various Elks projects for the community. Sitting right here on my desk was a remote control computer mouse still in its original package, a new voice recorder that I don’t need any more now that I am no longer a reporter, and a stack of unrecorded DvDs.
            “Why don’t you donate your electric piano?” asked my wife, whose opinion of my musical talents is subterranean to say the least.
            “Why don’t you donate your bagpipes?” I retorted and immediately regretted that, even though the swelling has gone down somewhat.
            I should report that problem of my remaining silent has now been solved. A couple of my Elks brothers and sisters informed me that the word “Silent” doesn’t mean that I have to refrain from making any comments; it just refers to the style of the auction itself. You write down your name and your on a piece of paper and the item goes to the highest bidder – after he pays for it of course.
            This was the place that I was able to use my advanced age as a useful tool (which was also what they called me). “You were here last year and you yapped the whole time,” said Zelda M, “including at the dinner, so you weren’t confused about it then. What are you talking about anyway?”
            “I’m seventy years old and am only asking for a little respect,” I said. “I forgot. Now I remember. I bought a barbecue, a chair and a gold-plated roasting pan.”
            “I believe that was a Trac II razor,” she said, “and we all give you little respect.”
                                                *****************
            Other observations:
            Two weeks ago my wife and I motored to the Bangor, Maine, area for a medical appointment in the town of Albion, and the impression I was left with about Bangor was that people sure drive fast there. We stayed in the Quality Inn on Hogan Road in the city, and I want to say I am lucky to be still in one piece. There were six lanes of traffic, no crosswalk in the area and I wanted to go to a Mexican Restaurant on the other side of Hogan Road. Three times I dashed out, only to hot-foot it back to relative safety until finally I saw an empty spot. I just made it. None of them even slowed down. When I reached the opposite curb I grabbed my mobile phone and called my wife, whom I could see in the motel window, and told her to take a taxi.
            Last week, sitting on a public bus in this municipality of Kincardine, Scotch Colony, I struck up a conversation with a stranger who said he hailed from New York City, which I gathered was a rather large town somewhere in the USA, beyond Bangor. We talked about various things, like how egg yolks are good for us now, and how nice a country North Korea is. He said he had recently visited there and had come home to face a lot of business problems. He was a tall man in his early 70s, with blond hair combed over a balding dome. I guessed his height at about 6’3” and his weight about 243 pounds. Seemed like a decent guy when he was talking about egg yolks, but went off the rails a bit when the subject went to politics, in which I have no interest. We said our goodbyes at the Lower Kintore-Lawson Hill bus stop. “Good riddance!” said one of the other riders. “We shoulda kicked him off the bus.” People sure are mean. Then I looked out the bus to see the tall stranger riffling through a wallet, taking out cash and throwing the wallet in the trash can. I felt my pocket. Empty.
                                                *****************
            I accomplished three things last week: I bought some shampoo and learned how useful were the plastic cards that weigh down my wallet all day.
            Wait a minute, that’s only two things.
            Anyway, I will outline the two things I did accomplish. On Thursday morning I found myself trying to wash my luxuriant locks with some of that Sunlight soap, the kind my Dad used to use on the hooves of our old ox Carling. (You thought I was going to say Babe, didn’t you?)
            Within hours I found myself in a pharmacy and then two grocery stores and a blacksmith’s stable – remember Carling – but it was not until I had gone into a little corner store away out “back of Bath” as they say that I found actual shampoo. Oh, I had found moisturizer, emollient, Goat Milk Body and Head Wash and something called ‘Peau Sensible’ but no shampoo.
            Going to the counter to pay for this treasure, I hauled out my handful of plastic cards but was told: “We don’t take those here. Cash till do.” What a day. If only I hadn’t ridden that bus.
                                                  -end-

Cobra and a stick (Feb 20)


At last! A scandal for Canada!

                                    by Robert LaFrance

            I was beginning to think that we Canadians were going to be forced to rely on the good old USA for our interesting news, but lo and behold, our own Prime Minister’s Office came through with a scandal.
            It’s a little confusing to this old country boy, but the Tories are alleging that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau interfered in a criminal case involving the giant Quebec company SNC Lavalin. He has denied it of course – that is how tradition works – and the former cabinet minister involved has stuffed a sock into her mouth so she cannot talk.
            Take that, Donald Trump.
            In spite of our Canadian troubles, whatever they are, the USA continues to fascinate, what with Donald Trump and that corral full of liars in the White House spewing forth on ways to keep him from getting impeached.
It's like watching a cobra beat itself up with a stick. The turnover in the White House reminds me of the 1970s when Richard Nixon resigned as he was about to be impeached. Before that, his vice-president, Spiro Agnew, resigned after being caught  stealing political donation money. Gerald Ford became president and one columnist wrote: "We needed a Lincoln but were given a Ford." Lyndon Johnson, referring to Ford's lack of intellectual gifts, said Ford 'had played too much football while not wearing a helmet'.
                                    *****************
On Tuesday evening I was sitting in front of my television when there was a massive commercial featuring the words SPRING SALE! (I put in the exclamation mark myself.)
Those words gave me hope. I look out my kitchen window to see snow drifted a metre (and more) deep in my orchard and I think to myself (my favourite way, as I mentioned before) spring is on the way. Now we can start worrying about Perth-Andover flooding.
On Thursday evening, two days after I saw that spring sale ad, I went to the monthly supper at Perth Elks and was it ever a treat! The McDougall sisters brought their chef hats; the Rock Cornish Hen they served was delicious.
Meals like that are just some of the reasons for people to join Perth Elks which is one of several organizations that do a lot for the community. When people have physical problems, get burned out of their homes, want help with student projects and a dozen other ways, Perth Elks has been there since the early 1950s raising money. Sponsored by Bryce Bishop and Mark Johnson, I joined in 1978 and never regretted it although they probably did. This might be a tortured metaphor, but that Cornish Hen was just the icing on the cake. I urge everyone (all 17) reading this column to join Perth Elks and do even more for your fellow citizens.
                                    ******************
Last week I was reading somewhere that, as we get older, everyone we see reminds us of someone in our past. Walking around the grocery store and getting some yogurt (or maybe it was wine) I saw a tall grey-haired guy who I could have sworn was someone I had shared a jail cell with back in the old days. We had been captured during a street demonstration in Vancouver. To be truthful for a change, I was just there chasing women and did not really know anything U.S. nuclear testing on the Kamchatka Peninsula of Alaska.
Anyway, a bunch of us ended up in jail cells in the Davie Street lockup and were there for about three hours while the cops spent all that time interviewing (asking for dates) the women who had been demonstrating.
Back to the guy in the grocery store, he turned out NOT to be the guy in the Davie Street jail. He was a United Church minister from Fredericton. Or maybe it was Minto.
                                    ******************
As a journalist for many decades, I am very proud to say that I never once used the phrase a number of instead of saying that number, even an estimated number. A reporter might write or say: " A number of delegates disagreed with the chairman…"
Well, what number were you referring to? A dozen, a hundred, a thousand?
Back to the subject of Canadian scandals, I think that school 'storm days' need looking into. Don't think I am about to complain about the number of storm days this school year – the kids have to be kept safe and away from bad roads – but I am going to take up the case of home-schooled kids, of which there are more and more every year, particularly in the Scotch Colony and Carlingford, possibly Minto.
As a trained lawyer (I have spent a lot of time at the bar) I am about to tackle the law or lack of law about home-schooled kids and storm days when all the kids at other schools get to stay home and help their moms with laundry. It's just not fair that home-schooled kids don't get a day off school. Their parents are brutes!
                                   -end-

Egg yolks now okay (Feb 6)


The mysterious Canada Food Guide 2019

                                    by Robert LaFrance

I am sure happy that we have weather because we can always find something to talk about. Ed and Sam, who haven’t seen each other for six months, met at the post office and sure enough they talk for six minutes and then start in on the weather, the one thing they CAN do something about.
However, they rarely do, except that sometimes one of them packs up and heads for Florida where it is hotter than the hubs of hell. Then that guy complains about the heat and decides to head back to New Brunswick where Old Man Winter is just getting serious.
Such was the case with Sam, who flew to Florida with his wife Helga in early December and returned home just when the average night-time temperature here was around minus 25 Celsius and the wind had just emerged from a bit of a sleep up behind Mount Carleton. Helga’s curses could have been heard in Tilley although they live in the Scotch Colony now.
“What kind of an idiot would go to Florida when it was fairly warm in New Brunswick and then come back to New Brunswick just when the Polar Vortex was arriving in Upper Kintore?” she asked rhetorically. Sam refrained from reminding her that she must be equally an idiot because she did that very thing. From sad experience, he had learned that being right rarely resulted in anything other than pain and sorrow.
Speaking of winter, I am getting rather tired of people coming on television to tell me to dress in layers. Is there another way? They never explain what they mean other than it is apparently a way of saying “dress warmly”.
Another of the great traditions of winter is the superstition that a rodent comes out of the ground on February 2nd and can predict whether we will have another six weeks of winter.
Really? Anyone living in New Brunswick and thinking there will only be six more weeks of winter needs his head examined.
Speaking of Donald Trump, is there any way those poor Americans can get rid of that in a mere six weeks? Even the major media outlets like CNN, Washington Post and New York Times must be getting really really tired of that dangerous buffoon in spite of the fact that he has provided thousands of journalistic jobs during the past two years.
Every time he breathes the media are on it. Come on, everyone knows he wouldn’t be president if Russia hadn’t guided his campaign from start to finish, but they either have to impeach him or put up with him for another two years. Good luck.
                                                **********************
            I didn’t finish my comments about Groundhog Day and I know the faithful reader is waiting for that. This morning I was taking some exercise down by the garage when I heard a rattling sound coming from underneath our blue recycling bin. At first I thought it might be a raccoon or possibly a tough porcupine, but as I watched, a brown body emerged head-first. How much snow could a woodchuck chuck you might ask? Well, this woodchuck/groundhog could certainly chuck a whack of it.
            He came out swearing and looked around at the sunny day. “Damn!” he said. “Another month and a half of this sh*t! Why don’t you people move to Florida anyway? I have to stay to make this prediction every year, but they make buses, trains, cars and planes every day. You could be sitting in Tampa by tomorrow afternoon.” And with that, he swore at his shadow and crawled back under the recycling bin. I went back to my favourite living room chair and thought about what he had said.
            A quick online scan of my bank account answered the groundhog/woodchuck’s question. If my bank account had been interactive it probably would have said: “Turn on the TV, you ain’t going down south unless you’re thinking about Maugerville. Or you could borrow some money from your cousin in Amherst and maybe get as far as Truro.”
                                                *****************
            This last section of my column I will devote to talking about all the excitement generated by the latest Canada Food Guide. I know I was thrilled and just about everyone at the club was talking about it.
            “I wonder what it means?” asked the Perfessor. “Five years ago they were telling Canadians to lay off the egg yolks because they are nothing but cholesterol and now they are telling us to drink more vodka and eat more eggs and we’ll live to be a hundred.”
            “I believe you’re referring to the Canadian Club pamphlet that the bartender (Hot Ted the women call him, just as a 375 pound man is called Tiny),” I commented. “A company that makes whiskey – or is it whisky? – can’t be relied on to recommend good choices in the way of nutrition.”
            So we argued for a while about egg yolks, now considered quite acceptable, and other food now banned from the Canada Food Guide 2019 lists and didn’t find any sense there at all, but we drank quite a bit of beer while doing it.
                                          -end-

Robbie Burns Night (Jan 23)


You won’t see me wearing a kilt!

                                    by Robert LaFrance

            The 2019 version of Robbie Burns Night is scheduled for Friday evening, January 25, and Sunday afternoon, Jan. 27 and I have an important warning to issue about that event. I will be singing.
            The good news is that I will not be singing a solo, although thousands have begged me to do that very thing. The next good news is that, because of a shipping error by Amazon, UPS, Purolator and others, I will not be wearing a kilt.
            The shipping error was that none of those companies would agree to ship my kilt because they felt that the LaFrance Tartan was likely to spontaneously combust, even though the French and the Scots have gotten along well over the years, except for one example here in the Colony.
            Moving on, I think it is now time for me to think about New Year’s Resolutions – for other people.
            One of the first things I would like to see is the changing of names back to their earlier ones. One case I refer to (or ‘reference’ as CNN might say) is the New Brunswick government department that looks after our roads and other government infrastructure.
            At present it is called Department of Transportation and Infrastructure (DTI) which confuses people to no end. If one uses the initials of every job of every department he would choke on alphabet soup, so quit it willya? Go back to D.O.T. so citizens know what you’re talking about.
            Suppose you are talking about the organization that forces us to pay income tax every year. The Canada Revenue Agency could easily be called OTGOHMSODSFG. That would be the Outfit That Grabs Our Hard-earned Money and Sends it to Ottawa to Disappear into the Swamps of the Federal Government.
            Therefore, QED, as my high school math teacher Graeme MacIntosh might say, we can now go back to D.O.T. instead of DTI. The department does hundreds of other jobs, including installing guardrails and buying their own office equipment. Then they could be DTIIGBOE.
            Now I’ve confused myself so badly that I can’t even remember what that acronym stands for.
                                                ******************
            Last week I finally remembered to go in to the pharmacy and get a flu shot so I could be sick with the flu for a while and after I recovered to the physical wreck you see before you I wondered why it wouldn’t be possible to get a vaccine against other ailments, referring to (referencing) some of the annoying ways people act. (Of course, being perfect, I know I never annoy others.)
            Tailgating for example. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if there were some kind of injection one could bestow on these drivers that would make them smarten up? On my way uptown that day, I was driving 70 km/hr on the slippery road at the upper end of the Kilburn Flat and there was not a vehicle in sight in my rear view mirrors. I swear on the book Fifty Shades of Grey that I didn’t drive any more than half a kilometre before a Blue Chevvy was right on my rear bumper as if wanting to give it some kind of massage. I slowed down very gently so she would pass but the only result was that she got even closer. There was plenty of room to pass but no room for me to pull over.
            Finally the Chevvy went by and the driver held up a digit, one usually found in the middle of one’s hand, to indicate her thanks for my courtesy.
            Just think if there had been a vaccine, preferably delivered by laser, that would result in that driver acquiring at least part of a brain, so that I could drive to town at a legal and reasonable speed?
            Once I got back home and my arm started hurting, I thought about some other conditions that were crying in their need of a vaccine, preferable a retroactive one. Just think if a medical person could give Donald Trump a needle and have him magically transformed from being a 5-year-old child to a responsible adult.
            Oh, never mind. We can’t ask for miracles.
                                                *********************
            Closer to home than Washington, D.C., I notice that the NB Minister of Education, Dominic Cardy, has promised to do something about the large number of storm days for our province’s fresh-faced, eager to learn students. However, short of legislating against storms themselves, I can’t figure out what he thinks may be a solution to the problem.
            Having the students make up time on Saturdays has been tried and found wanting, making the school days longer has been mooted, keeping school in later in June as well (oh yeah! Students and teachers would love that!), and various other fixes have been tried.
            Hey, it’s winter and it’s New Brunswick. Unless we can move the whole place to Victoria, BC, just behind the Empress Hotel, there ain’t no solution unless all lessons are put on the Internet. Good luck D. Cardy.
                                        -end-