Tuesday, July 14, 2009

New Favorite Wedding Venue

This past weekend I had a wedding at Kew Gardens in the gazebo. After sweeping up the cigarette butts it's my new favorite wedding venue. Steps from the Queen Streetcar to the north and a short walk to the lake at the south, with a densely wooded path for the bride or whomever to walk out from to the west and lush greenery to the east, the gazebo itself stands on it's own. I have no idea when it was built, but the ornate iron work suggest the first bit of the last century. Windows along it's top let in indirect light but not rain, and a single iron and wood park bench adorns the hardwood floor. The paint is peeling everywhere, giving the romantic structure a sense of aging sort of beauty. If a big band were to appear out of nowhere, they'd be at home here. If an ancient carousel rose from the ground a hundred yards or so away, it wouldn't be out of place.

The Beach (or Beaches for pluralist) is the one part of Toronto that truly has a west coast feel to it, whether it's because of the level of the land or proximity to the lake or the rise of the streets heading north, I don't know. The vibe is brilliant and Kew Gardens seems to be it's beating heart.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Flash Fiction Friday

So I read the instructions wrong, kinda misunderstood the assignment. I had 1,000 words to play with but only thought I had 100. So here's my error:
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Winter sleeps under skin, under the last contrived epidermal layer. All the other statues stand jealous in their heat for no one reaches out a curious hand to stroke calf or hand or hem.

“What does it feel like?” he asks, but her steel lips don’t answer. Only the hum of a generator and the coolant rushing through an approximation of veins fills the silence between them.

He reaches a tentative hand to hers, the temperature foreign. “How People Felt When There Was Snow” does not flinch away, but stares into the tomorrow when she will contain more life he.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Environmental Product Review #1: Our first LED lightbulb

The spiral glow of a CFL may be an icon in the green energy movement but I just don't like them. They consume less energy and make a good environmental choice on that level, but they suck in that they contain mercury, requiring special precautions when they break or are disposed and also that they can burn out spectacularly & pose fire hazards Incandescent bulbs are being phased out in Ontario by 2012, though, so we needed an option.

For the past year I've been emailing green stores in Toronto saying "are we there yet", looking for a reasonably priced residential LED bulb. Given that an LED bulb can last 10K hours or more and draws about 6 watts, reasonably priced is still pretty freaking high which seems to have kept them out of reach for local retailers. Finally, at the green living show I found the wise and very friendly people at Green & Clean Energy Co. Ltd and their glorious $40 bulb.

Not a typo. Forty freaking dollars. Fortunately the wine garden was close at hand.

Took a deep breath and brought one home. My first impression was that I disagreed with the claim that they're balanced to sunlight. Sunlight on my planet doesn't look like this. This is a very bad photo, the light it cast is brighter than this, enough to see and read comfortably by. Still, you can see how it might give one the willies.



The plastic dome (cool to the touch) covers three tiny pin lights. (don't look directly at them, really really) Tinted domes are available to give a more incandescent glow but we went for the honest light. After about two days we agreed that it's better described as moonlight, perhaps a little poetic but just how it looks to us. Everything it illuminates looks clearer and more real than items in other rooms. As we've got used to the LED, the incandescent and CFL (don't like them, still have them, won a gift pack and don't like wasting resources) lights now look strange by comparison. And as we're able to we'll be replacing all bulbs with LEDs. We crunched the numbers on it and although the replacements will mean that the bulbs in each fixture will often cost more than the fixtures themselves, the energy savings alone pays for each bulb within the first one to two years. The bulbs may then last up to 20 years of nearly free light, which makes them initially expensive but excellent value.

Because we're nerds, we've even had friends and neighbours over to stare at our bulb. The general first impression is a) it's really nifty, b) it's too expensive and c) we're insane for having bought it. After explaining the value of it most people let up on point c and a little on point b, but it will likely take a price break to get these bulbs into the minds and then hands of the masses.