StillPaisleyCat

joined 2 years ago

Another excellent European product is Weleda from Germany.

We switched to that for lip balm because Burt’s Bees has soy in it and we had a family member with a sensitivity.

For hand and body cream, we’re just trying Nova Scotia Fisherman now. So far, after just a couple of weeks, it’s great.

For facial skin care, have been using Maritime Naturals for a couple of years. Excellent product.

Haven’t tried this one.

Can recommend BioVert. We’ve used their fragrance free laundry detergent for many years.

Nature Clean, another Canadian company, has oxy bleach and stain remover strips that we like too.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Ling is a tool for advanced learning in my experience.

Excellent at what it does though.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

Camino is a Canadian brand brings in fair-trade and organic chocolate. Gluten-free also.

They have semi-sweet, bittersweet, unsweetened and vegan white chocolate chips.

https://camino.ca/product-category/baking-products/chocolate-chips/

Available widely.

Although you didn’t ask, there is a fantastic Canadian cake decorating brand that has sprinkles etc. Many are free of major allergens too.

https://sweetapolita.com/

Parksville is likely far more commercial and developed than you recall.

But the beaches remain.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 10 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Here are some suggestions with a kids lens:

Vancouver Island

  • get mid Island then over to the west coast

  • Parksville - large sandy beaches to dig in

  • ferry to Denman Island and then to Hornsby Island - fossils! https://hornbynaturalhistory.com/category/fossils/

  • Qualicum Beach - gravelly and lots of seniors, but a great place to see bald eagles picking up clams and oysters, dropping them to break them open and diving to eat.

  • Cathedral grove on Hwy to Port Alberni, accessible old growth forest

  • Alberni - old forestry interpretation site with a logging train in the Cherry Creek area

  • Drive to Tofino - an adventure in itself

  • Long Beach

  • whale watching

If you go to Vancouver, many of the classic stops are worth it

  • the Aquarium
  • Whale watching
  • Grouse mountain gondola and mountain top
  • Capilano suspension bridge and the fish hatchery and environs
  • Seabus
  • UBC museum of anthropology

Mapping and confirming the existence of a system larger than the world renowned Castleguard Cave system is the story here.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I think that may be US labeling still in use in Vermont and New York.

Canadian maple syrup hasn’t been graded that way for some time. We’re in a syrup producing region and get it locally from producers.

That seems to be regional.

Perhaps there’s some interprovincial barriers that we’re not aware of.

Growing up on the west coast, real maple syrup was a luxury.

Where we are now in Eastern Ontario, we buy it by the litre or even by the case. Our teens pour it freely all over their plates.

We use the medium or amber at the table, and the darkest we can get for baking.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 3 points 3 months ago (3 children)

Grade B is now called amber, I believe.

But whatever, the darker coloured syrup has more flavour and is better value.

[–] StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Did I miss the actual Protostar announcement?

 

An interesting, deliberately thought provoking 🤔 question for a lazy long weekend Sunday morning…

Setting aside whether specific fans like specific ‘gimmicks’ (crossovers, musicals, bringing back Kirk or Khan) or tropes (transporter malfunctions), Space.com is posing the hypothesis that the proportion was too high in Strange New Worlds second season.

There’s no arguing that the season was successful in drawing in large audiences week after week. Taking a look back though, was there too much trippy-Trek(TM) dessert and not enough of a meaty main course? YMMV surely.

For my part, I can both agree that trippy Trek is something I’ve been wanting more of, and that I would have welcomed 2 or 3 more episodes were more grounded or gave the opportunity to see more of Una as a leader and dug into Ortegas backstory.

The 90s shows seemed to be bit embarrassed by trippyness, although Voyager found its pretext allowed even stern Janeway to pronounce ‘Weird is our business.’ One can argue that the high proportion in SNW is a feature, not a bug.

I’d still prefer a 12-15 episode season though.

 

Interesting extract from a longer /Film interview with in-demand director Roxann Dawson.

I appreciate how she speaks with respect for the shows of the new era.

 

Season-long prerelease reviews are an exception to this community’s rules about posting reviews. (The mods prefer our members to prefer to post their own episode reviews here.)

It seems that today’s the day that Paramount’s embargo on ‘spoiler free’ (in theory) season reviews for Lower Decks season 4 comes off, and the first pro reviews are now posted by some who have seen the screeners.

From Inverse:

  • each one of these 30-minute episodes is nearly perfect. Just as the USS Cerritos presents the workhorse of Starfleet, with Season 4, Lower Decks again proves it is the workhorse of the entire Star Trek franchise.

From SlashFilm - view with caution, a bit more spoilery

  • /Film Rating: 9 out of

Any to add to the list?

 

Couldn’t resist sharing this video trailer.

Horak continuously overturns preconceptions about integrating differently-abled actors.

Apparently, in addition to the upcoming run of Goblin: MacBeth at Stratford Festival, Rebecca Northan (Horak’s collaborator) is already working on developing Goblin: Oedipus for an Alberta production next year.

 

@Nmyownworld@startrek.website spotted Murf in the poster in the promotional announcement for Star Trek Day.

Nmyownworld’s mention on the Star Trek Day thread was great, but I thought it would be great to amplify it. So here is the image with the colour intensity dialed up a bit and Murf circled to be easier to spot.

StarTrek Prodigy Lives!!!

 

This is good news for assuring that SNW’s 3rd season production will move ahead after the strike.

Greenlighting a couple of extra episodes and a 4th season would make strategic sense, but I’m just not willing to give Paramount the benefit of the doubt on that.

 

For those not already aware, Michele Stokes a fan in the UK raised over $US 1200 through a GoFundMe to pay for a skywriter with a #SAVESTARTREKPRODIGY banner.

It flew midday today in LA. The ScreenRant article captures much of the social media including a few videos, and the reactions of the Hageman Brothers and @GoodAaron@startrek.website.

Michele Stokes is also the fan who started the change.org petition to Save Star Trek Prodigy. It’s been progressing slowly since it surpassed 30k signatures during SDCC, and is very close to 33k now. If you haven’t signed and are willing to deal with the platform (which is now monetized), Prodigy could still benefit from your support.

 

Working from the oral history in The Five Year Mission: The next 25 years, this is a fascinating deep dive that answers the question “How did a recycled cover of a 1998 song written for Rod Stewart, ‘Where My Heart Will Take Me’ aka ‘Faith of the Heart’ become the title music for Enterprise?”

Also, after resisting melodic scoring in all the 90s shows, it turns out this was the music Rick Berman liked?!!

“…I, for one, can tell you that I thought it was a great opening and I'm not alone in that. I don't think I'm in the majority, but I'm not alone."

And it seems the song does have its own subniche of supporters who share Berman’s view. (But not I.)

 

I’m somewhat more understanding of Goldsman’s approach to character development after reading this.

 

@GoodAaron@startrek.website has shared the news on Mastodon.

The GoFundMe has exceeded its goal. The organizer described it as follows:

The plan is to hire either a skywriter or sky banner to make passes over the offices of potential new homes for Star Trek Prodigy, namely Amazon, Netflix, etc. The more we're able to raise, the more streamers we'll be able to lobby and the louder we'll be able to shout about what an amazing show Star Trek Prodigy is - for fans of all ages.

 

As many of us here migrated from Reddit during the blackout, I thought some here would be interested in the calls for Facebook and Instagram blackouts in Canada in response to Meta’s blocking of links.

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/3673419

Non-Paywall Article

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