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Author Topic: Where we live  (Read 93519 times)
Jilly
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« Reply #80 on: 14 December 2009, 23:13:31 »
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The Peach Festival is held each year in Penticton.  People come from all over   for this event.  There's live music on the bandstand, and various acts appear.  Really good family entertainment and fun.  Don't bother trying to get a motel room during this season though,  you probably won't find one.  The only way would be to book way in advance and the prices will be high.

More about it on here:

http://www.peachfest.com/

......................

The Observatory is really interesting, especially if you enjoy learning about Space.

The last time I was there was in 2004. Too long really. We lived in the most picturesque little house in an Orchard in Oliver at that time. There were cherry trees in our front garden, and the Orchard had different fruits like peaches, pears, apples, grapes (used for Ice-wine), plums, Nectarines to name just some. I also used to grow pumpkins each years (just for fun for the kids), and the strawberries and Rhubarb grew regardless.

One year a bird laid all her eggs in the truck of a big tree at the bottom of the garden. We watched over the eggs to make sure no predators would get them. Eventually they started hatching and almost straight after walked off with their bird mom. We'd often see the group walking around around the Orchard. I just can't remember the name of the bird now, I thought if was a cardinal, but I'm not sure. It was quite a biggish bird.

Birds' nests with freshly laid bird eggs were abundant in the Orchard. We kept an eye on the ones that were around, just to see how the baby birds fared. Then we'd watch the baby birds as they grew and eventually fly away.  A couple of times I had to hand feed orphaned birds, it wasn't an easy thing to do.
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Jilly
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« Reply #81 on: 14 December 2009, 23:16:43 »
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Just thought I'd put a map of the Okanagan:



 As you can see Osoyoos is on the US/Canada border.  We used to go over to the States every week to do some shopping.

Kelowna is the biggest city in the area, with a population of over 100,000.  Followed closely by Kamloops.  I've been to all the towns and cities on the map at one time or another.  The Northern part of the Okanagan doesn't hold my interest in the same way as the Southern part.  It's also not as hot in the North, which means that the fruit is harvested at a slightly later time.

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Jilly
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« Reply #82 on: 14 December 2009, 23:17:35 »
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Manning park:



http://www.bcadventure.com/adventure/explore/vancouver/parks/manning.htm
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Rattler
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« Reply #83 on: 15 December 2009, 12:11:06 »
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Thanks! A beautiful area, methinks, something for my fathers son if it weren´t cold...

Rattler
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« Reply #84 on: 15 December 2009, 15:51:20 »
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It is a lovely area,  Rattler.  Maybe you should visit one day...
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Rattler
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« Reply #85 on: 15 December 2009, 17:02:16 »
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It is a lovely area,  Rattler.  Maybe you should visit one day...

Too many ppl still: Kelowna it says 110.000, Penticton it says 45.000, that is two major cities on just 25km distance, do not even want to start to imagine the weekends on the lake shores when it is warm and sunny... Smiley

Here at least I only have to live with 4 month of tourism and weekend offenders (vs my peace Smiley ) 6 month I have the beaches and the sea,
the woods and the mountains for myself (but no coffee nor chow... Bedroefd, cannot have it all! )

Alternative: Kamchatka!  Mongolia! Smiley 400.000 ppl overall on the 2nd biggest area in the world! Smiley

Rattler
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Mad Russian
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« Reply #86 on: 15 December 2009, 17:43:37 »
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It's nice and sunny there too  Rattler! They must get sun at least 32 days a year.  hihi


Good Hunting.

MR
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Jilly
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« Reply #87 on: 15 December 2009, 18:21:18 »
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Rattler,  Osoyoos is the only pocket desert in Canada,  and the winters are the mildest there then anywhere else in this country.

The cities may seem populated but the outskirts are full of orchards and farmland, very peaceful, and yet not too far from all the amenities.  

Kamchatka and Mongolia sound like an adventure...shall I pack my bags?
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« Reply #88 on: 15 December 2009, 19:25:27 »
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It's nice and sunny there too  Rattler! They must get sun at least 32 days a year.  hihi
MR

Mongolia:
Quote
The country averages 257 cloudless days a year, and it is usually at the center of a region of high atmospheric pressure. Precipitation is highest in the north (average of 20 to 35 centimeters per year) and lowest in the south, which receives 10 to 20 centimeters annually.


Kamchatka:

Quote
Kamchatka's climate is decidedly continental; cool winters, warm summers. Summer and autumn months are by far the most popular (June-October) when max temperatures range from 15C (59F) to 30C (86F), but a growing trend in winter sports keeps tourism pulsing year-round.

Climatic variation is a startling phenomenon in Kamchatka. There are twenty distinct climate zones, divided along coastal, alpine and geothermal lines. The most startling variations occur in geothermally-active areas, where whole valleys are warmed by steam or geyser fields.


Hot springs have also kept alive dozens of species decimated during the last ice age. At Kronotsky Inlet, steamy riverside springs have preserved an ancient stand of blue-needled fir trees, while the vast six-by-eight-mile Uzon Caldera creates its own climate. Pulsing geysers, heaving mud pools and steam fields warm the earth, causing spring shoots to sprout early and tempting surly brown bears (the world's largest) to emerge early from hibernation. Wagtails let the warm earth do its share of the egg incubation and bald eagles soar through steam clouds, daring anything to move.

Kamchatka's climate is as diverse as its wildlife. You will find a moderate maritime zone on either coast, a continental zone in the central valley with four distinct seasons, and an arctic zone in the northern parts of the peninsula. Depending on when and where you choose to travel on the peninsula, you will find a tremendous variance in temperature. The beauty of traveling to Kamchatka is that all of these climatic zones are easily accessible. Depending on how ambitious an itinerary you choose for yourself, you will find lush forests, extreme mountain ranges, remote lakes, rocky coastlines, and vast tundra.


I would still prefer Mongolia, between the month of MAY and SEP, right now it is not a recommended place to be for my fathers son  smallstop : http://espanol.wunderground.com/global/stations/44292.html !- 25 degrees centigrade but sunny (Ulán Bator)!  hdbng, and tomorrow it will reach -43 during the night and hottest (erhm) will be -27 during daytime, this for Rinchinlhumbe...

OTOH, you can eat out cheap:

Quote
A meal in a "foreign" restaurant such as the UB Delicatessen or the Marco Polo will cost an average of 10,000 Tugrug while a meal in a Mongolian restaurant will cost around 4,000 Tugrug.


which would be 6 USD or 7 CAD for the meal in Marco Polo, and 2,5 USD or 3 CAD for the cheaper one.

1 Canadian Dollar (CAD) = 1.371,61 Mongolian Tugrik (MNT)

1 US Dollar (USD) = 1.455,00 Mongolian Tugrik (MNT)

Rattler
« Last Edit: 15 December 2009, 19:40:25 by Rattler » Logged

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« Reply #89 on: 15 December 2009, 20:52:30 »
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hmmm...those hot springs sound good.  I never knew it got so cold there,  quite surprised.  Yep,  May to September would be the best time to go.   

It really would be an amazing adventure,  something so completely different.

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« Reply #90 on: 19 December 2009, 22:15:00 »
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Some random pictures from druing the last 2 weeks:

Last Sunday almost stepped on "Erna", can you wee hat it is?



From the other side it becomes much clearer, Erna is one of my Praying Mantis that live in the garden:





Here, as promised the picture of the puppy, son of  my Locke and a Beagle, that I managed to find a home for, "Raco", currently 56 days old:



and - some of - the others:



and, one of myself last Sunday, working at parts of the boat:



Rattler
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« Reply #91 on: 19 December 2009, 22:48:10 »
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Oh my gosh,  the puppies are so cute.

We had a collection of Praying Mantis a couple of years ago.  The baby one's were so tiny, I was surprised just how big they grew.  Does that one stay in your garden all the time, Rattler?  Or is it just one of many?  Can you tell them apart?

What exactly are you doing with the boat,  Rattler?  It looks like quite the job fixing it up.
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Rattler
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« Reply #92 on: 20 December 2009, 09:36:46 »
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Oh my gosh,  the puppies are so cute.

Aren´t they? It were 7 in total (one had died at birth), and they have a good character, 4 are distincitvely "Mama" and 3 come out like Locke. Two (Raco and Coda) will remain here in the village, and they will make great hunters! Socialisation is guaranteed, the village is already all over them Smiley



We had a collection of Praying Mantis a couple of years ago.  The baby one's were so tiny, I was surprised just how big they grew.  Does that one stay in your garden all the time, Rattler?  Or is it just one of many?  Can you tell them apart?

They are hard to tell apart as they change color (which Is why I put the Apple to the isde of her). OTOH they are territorial, and e.g. "Erna" appears always on the same plant.
What exactly are you doing with the boat,  Rattler?  It looks like quite the job fixing it up.

It is, yes, am at 200 hours already, but after it had sunk in 2008 and I did not repair it for a year, now its a lot of work for the woodwork...

Rattler
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« Reply #93 on: 21 December 2009, 00:10:22 »
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Very very cute.    Smiley

I wish I could have one.
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Jilly
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« Reply #94 on: 21 December 2009, 00:23:55 »
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As you know I live in the country side and we have many wild animals around here.  The big ones, like Moose, deer, but also squirrels, skunks, foxes. snakes etc.

This summer I walked into my kitchen and found this little wild  baby rabbit on the floor.  Sadly, it was dead, and my cat was sitting next to it:

 


My son found this toad,  we eventually let it go:

 

This bird flew right into the living room window and fell with a thump on the ground outside.  I went out there and picked it up,  it didn't look in too bad a shape, just a bit dazed.  Eventually I put it  up on this tree and then flew away:



 and ofcourse my silly dog:



Fluffball as a very tiny kitten.  Her mother rejected her at one week old and I had to feed her and her siblings with baby formula from a dropper from then on.  This one we kept,  and we are very attached to her as you can imagine. She is only about 3 or so weeks old here:





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« Reply #95 on: 21 December 2009, 21:44:53 »
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one of my friends, Tarkan, in the snow of the last days...he LOVES it!

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Jilly
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« Reply #96 on: 21 December 2009, 23:08:19 »
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Cute. 

It looks like it snows where you are as much as it does around here.  How cold does it get in mid-winter over there?
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« Reply #97 on: 22 December 2009, 20:11:57 »
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Cute. 

It looks like it snows where you are as much as it does around here.  How cold does it get in mid-winter over there?


the last days we had the coldest ones for a long time...people always complain here...

cold here? serious talking? -10°C is cold, -15°C is extreme....

I have no problem with the weather, altough we live in a wooden tiny house....no central heating...cold floor etc....it's the time of the year...
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Rattler
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« Reply #98 on: 22 December 2009, 22:38:30 »
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ask me!

we had -2.9 degrees in Palma on Sunday, coldest (December) day in 125 yrs...

And, or houses are all made for above zero (you cannot even drain the water from the pipes outside).

Rattler
« Last Edit: 23 December 2009, 04:16:34 by Rattler » Logged

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Mad Russian
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« Reply #99 on: 23 December 2009, 01:56:39 »
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Aw come on Jody.....remember GLOBAL WARMING? Couldn't possibly be the coldest day in 125 years now could it? Just ask Al he'll tell you.

Good Hunting.

MR
« Last Edit: 23 December 2009, 07:45:27 by Mad Russian » Logged
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