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Ontario Photo Contest Sponsored by Kanetix Celebrates The Travel Industry

There are now seventy amazing pictures of Ontario Tourist Attractions

on this cool new photo contest website.

The Big Nickel tourist attraction in Sudbury Ontario

Starting in september, Lenzr has been collecting Ontario Tourist Attractions pictures and is set-up to make participants slightly nostalgic and reminiscent of their own family road trips across this great big province. They should reflect on all the places they stopped wherein family pictures for scrapbooks and photo albums occured. The Big Nickle was submitted by sj_gb who delights the admin by linking to a personal photography blogspot in the designated area in the user profile.  This contest is a search for pictures that celebrate of our province’s most interesting destinations, and The Big Nickle is a classic. Look at these other gems, This photo by Slimmswitch is called Ottawa - The Spider City and so far it has the most votes with the highest rating.

Caption: Located in Ottawa, if you stand under this huge spider and look up you can actually see they put fake spider eggs inside the structure??

The one is titled, No Pesky Neighbours Here and was uploaded by mommakoala. This is a terrific photo from 1000 islands tourist attraction in the most eastern corner of Ontario.

Ontario Tourist AttractionsLenzr is an online attraction that celebrates Ontario as it asks users to upload scenic shots of the province's most delightful destinations.
<p><a title="Ontario Tourist Attractions" href="http://lenzr.com/ontario/contest.php?contestID=19"><img alt="Ontario Tourist Attractions" class="alignleft" style="margin:10px;" title="Ontario Tourist Attractions" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2649/3912626582_1744d178e5.jpg" align="right" width="173" height="120" /></a><a title="Ontario Tourist Attractions" href="http://lenzr.com/ontario/contest.php?contestID=19"><b>Ont</b></a><a title="Ontario Tourist Attractions" href="http://lenzr.com/ontario/contest.php?contestID=19"><b>ario Tourist Attractions</b></a> photo contest on Lenzr sponsored by, Kanetix <a title="Kanetix.ca insurance &amp; mortgage rate quotes" href="http://kanetix.ca">insurance &amp; mortgage rate quotes</a>, is a search for pictures that celebrate of our province’s most interesting destinations.</p>
Ontario Tourist Attractions photo contest on Lenzr sponsored by Kanetix insurance & mortgage rate quotes This photo contest ends 12:01 am on the morning of November 1st 2009. Two Prizes: both cash prizes. There’s a $200 value first prize, followed by a $100 second prize unit.

St Lawrence Market in Toronto
 
 
   
 

Economics
Morgan:     He s pretty cool, just really lazy and has no motivation for anything other than what he has to to get by.

Brad:     That s how we all are, we just define "get by" differently.
 
 
 

   
Free and Easy
"Living life like a Sunday stroll, free and easy down the road I go." 

You see, I was TRYING to channel Dierks Bentley this morning, even had him on in my car, but it really didn't work out for me . 

Here's what happened:

I left for work at 11:45 am. I was running late (duh!) but that's not too bad. I was driving in via I-94 when suddenly traffic comes to an abrupt stop. What the.....?

It is Sunday morning, there shouldn't be any traffic at all, much less a traffic jam. I crept along at a snail's pace trying to figure out what was going on. I knew that the MN Twins were playing their final game at the Metrodome today (of the season...for a playoff spot, but also their final game EVER bc they built a new stadium) and that the game is sold out, but even that didn't account for gridlock more than 10 miles away from the stadium. 

After a few moments of thinking, I decided--and I thought this was a brilliant plan--to scoot off on I-35E south and take the side roads through town, eventually cutting across to the university. Seemed like a grand plan, and I was psyched. I got off the interstate and started my trek. I knew exactly where I was going, but traffic was unusually thick here as well. I shrugged it off as "ah well, people must have had the same thought" and kept on a-goin'. 

When I hit the main street I would use to cut over to the university, all I needed to do was turn right and it would take me practically to the school's front door. So, I get in the right lane and just before I make that turn, I see (about 2 blocks ahead) "ROAD CLOSED". What the.....?

It took me only a moment to figure out why one of the main streets (Lexington Ave. for the curious) in St. Paul would be closed. The DAMN Twin Cities marathon. So fine, Lexington is closed at Summit, but (and here is where I get really brilliant) I figure there is NO WAY they have closed the north and south halves of the city off from one another, there simply MUST be a way across. {To be clear, I was on the south half of the city and I needed to be on the north half} 

It was about this time that I called home and told my mom this saga. She advised that I stop a cop and ask where the cut across was so I could get to work. This was a great plan, except that all of the cops that I saw were on the marathon route, so in order to talk to one, I would have had to find a place to park my car (impossible!) walk two blocks to the marathon and then ask for help. Not. Happening. I figure I could figure it out. Ha! Wrong. 

I decided not to backtrack because the traffic was SOOOO bad going that direction (east) that I guessed it would be smarter to head west and keep checking for a place to cross over. So that's exactly what I did. I won't bore you with the details except to say this; turns out, for the marathon, they are very much willing to shut down one side of the city from the other. There is no place to cut over. Not one. Every way I went was a dead end. Road fricking closed. There were so many road closed signs that they seemed to be funneling the traffic all in one direction. East. Back the way I came. 

ARGH! So I headed back toward the interstate after my fruitless search and sat in some of the worst traffic imaginable before I even get to the interstate. Seriously, at one point, the line of cars I was in was so long it stretched from one stoplight to the next. Which meant that one or maybe two cars was getting through each rotation of the light. Finally, I got on the interstate headed back toward I-94 (where I started from) when I realized one thing. There is no way to go west on 94 from where I was. The only way to do it takes you through town and I wasn't doing that because I didn't know where the damn marathon route was and didn't want to get stuck again. So I ended up crossing OVER 94 to the north side of town and creating a route through that area. It wasn't pretty and it wasn't fast, but at least I was moving and not in traffic. 

Final result?

Typical mileage from home to work: 18 miles
Average drive time from home to work: 22 minutes
Today's mileage from home to work: 34 miles
Today's drive time from home to work: 90 minutes
Time work started: Noon
Time I arrived: 1:20 pm
Ability to laugh at myself after this experience......Priceless!

Would you like to see this craziness?

Exhibit A- My typical route to work, with "A" being my home and "B" being my work:



Exhibit B- My "marathon" (pun intended) route to work, with "A" being my home and "B" being my work:



And if you look closely, you can see several areas where the purple line is darker...that is the places where I was forced to double back. 

"Someday I know it's gonna take me home, so...
Free and easy down the road I go"

Thanks for the advice Dierks.

 
 
   
 

I Ate 100 Shrimps Without Licking Them!

                 D is gone again; possibly for good this time.  There are only 5 days left of school, now 4, but … it’s still painful.  Again.  He JUST got back; we just had a week and a half together again, but there is a chance he won’t be back the rest of the year.

                Apparently, yesterday’s trip to the dentist to get fluoride painted on his teeth (he HATES the dentist and has had a lot of work done) was too much.  He’d also had a conversation with his sister about the field trip, and was probably having a hard time with the idea that her class would be swimming and our class would not be.  The way the weather is NOBODY will be swimming, because it SUCKS out right now, but still… he lost it, fled into a moderately big city, actually bit, spit on, scratched and kicked his mother (he has NEVER physically hurt her before).  LONG story short, he was taken by the police to a hospital down where the dentist is, and then after a 5-hour wait were told “eh, he’s calm, it’s your choice if we’re going to hospitalize him or not”.  She took him home to discuss options with his case worker, but … not looking good.  I had to work very hard to not cry on the phone; if Nichole was able to hold it together while she told me about her 9-year old son in crisis, I at least owed it to her to not break down, but it will happen by nightfall.  It’s been sitting in my stomach all day.

                Everything else today was fine.  Field Day was cancelled, so we had a regular-ish morning, watched the Time Capsule opening from 10:30 – 11:30, silent read and did some writing, and then they finally watched ‘the Wild’, the movie I’ve voted for the last …. 3 months.  I didn’t even watch.  I feel bad, but I didn’t.  Wasn’t as captivating as I had hoped for.  I read Number the Stars instead.  I love that book.






*The title of my entry today came from A.  I have absolutely no idea why he uttered it.  I just know I really needed a smile today, and he provided me with it.  I hope it did the same for you.

 

 
 
 

   
Tell Me What You Really Think.....
Today, on Yahoo! Sports, there is an article about a 16-year-old boy who is opting out of high school. Apparently, his parents are allowing (encouraging?) him to skip the last two years of high school, get his GED, and enroll in junior college, so he'll be eligible for the MLB draft a year earlier.

If you haven't already done so, go back and follow the link and read it - I'll wait.


Okay, are you back?

Now, let's talk about this. I'd like to start with my favorite quote from the article, courtesy of Bryce Harper's father, Ron.

"
"People are going to see what they want to see and say what they want to say. I think this prepares him for life, playing the game of baseball."

It's a little unclear, but it reads like Ron Harper believes that playing the game of baseball prepares you for life. That's almost too absurd for comment, so we'll move to the other possibility, that he's saying leaving high school prepares him for life AND for playing the game of baseball.

I think that is what is meant, and that's what I want to talk about.

Does it really?

He's leaving high school and starting junior college as a way of hurrying his eligibility for the Major League draft. I'm not going to touch the concept of whether he's good enough, I am assuming he is or this wouldn't even be a question. So fine, at the age of 17 he gets drafted possibly to play for the Washington Nationals.

Now, at the age of 17, they're throwing money at him (the most popular figure seems to be $20,000,000), he's incredibly famous (and look how well that works out for other young people),  he's living away from his parents, he's spending all of his time with people who are older than he is, he is living in an insular community (i.e. not actually seeing "real life"), he is required to be fully accountable for his own actions (no more parents to keep tabs on him), and this is the rest of his life (at least his professional life). No going back. He's not a kid anymore. He's an adult who must live and act as an adult from this point forward.

Except, he's not. Let's be honest here, he's a sixteen year old boy. Not. An. Adult. His father also said "Bryce is a good kid. He's smart." Okay, great. I'm glad, but that's him at home, under your supervision. That's not him, out on his own, under the influence of fame, fortune, and men/boys that are several years older than him.

For me, it isn't about the education. Education is entirely what you make of it. How much he learns will be dependent on how much he tries to learn and he can put forth that effort in any number of settings. Alternatives to high school aren't (or at least, shouldn't be) the issue here. He can always go back at a later date and finish school. He probably won't, but he can if he wants to. The problem I am seeing here is the precedent we're setting. And it isn't just this kid. It's all kids who opt out of being kids and having a life for the possibility of catching the dream.

More than the article itself, I was very interested in the comments section. It amazes me how many people seem to think this is a good idea. (The poll at the bottom was at 55% to 45% in FAVOR of this being a good idea). After a page or two, the comments quickly become repetitive, no one seems to have anything new or original to say. But the comment I keep seeing the most is any variation on: "you'd do it if you could."

Well, it's probably true. If I were 16 and offered a chance to leave high school two years early so that people could throw fame and fortune at me, I'm sure I'd say yes. Probably lots of high school kids would. Most, even. But that's hardly the point, the point is that it shouldn't be his decision. There is a reason why kids aren't legally adults at 16. Kids are idiotic at 16.

They do things like sneaking out and trying to drive to another town (and they don't know how to get there) to see a cute boy (or girl depending on preference) and getting lost and crashing the car and needing a nearby farmer who looks eerily like Jesus to come and save them.

Or they'll drive down a dark country road and kill all the lights and try to drive in the dark, regardless of the danger.

Or they play chicken with cross traffic at an intersection.

Or do Chinese fire drills at the busiest intersection in town.

That's 16.

And that is exactly why we have parents. To keep us from doing the really stupid stuff, to check us and rein us in when we're not making the best decisions. So that at the end of the day, after we've crammed in as much stupidity as possible, we have to go home and be accountable to someone else.

It is up to his parents to decide whether or not he should be leaving home to go play baseball 2 years early. Evidently, they seem to think it is a good idea.  (I think it is pretty obvious by now that I completely disagree). They seem pretty focused on the "opportunity" and the money. I think it is very unfortunate that they don't seem to put Bryce's needs first. If he's truly talented, then the opportunity will still be there in 2 years. The money will also still be there in 2 years. And honestly, he'll probably only be better then, than he is now. (Just look at the story of our hometown hero, Joe Mauer.)

I really hope that this kid manages to work everything out and that all his dreams fall into place. I hope that he doesn't have to learn every tough lesson in the book, all on his own. I hope that it's all sunshine and apple pie from this point forward, but let's be realistic. Life doesn't work that way. Not even baseball works that way.

It is so unfortunate that at such a young, impressionable age, this kid is getting his priorities in place as: baseball, money, opportunity. Now there is little room left for things like: family, friends, education, and youth. This kid is now done being a kid. Now he's an adult who was sent into the world with a very skewed perspective on what is truly important in life. And to me, that is the saddest part.

.....so, tell me. What do you think?



 
 
   
 

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