This is my baby boy Malcolm. He was eight months old when I filmed this. Apparently there was something really funny about the way I was tapping the side of his playpen. I can't help but love the way children look at the world.
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Thursday, April 30, 2015
I don't like it condescension in my cereal.
Back in 2006 I spent six months in Scotland. One of my favourite things to eat for breakfast was Weetabix. It was sort of like a big healthy breakfast cookie made of whole wheat that went great with a bit of milk and whatever fruit was on had (or some of the maple syrup that I had brought from home).
While shopping for groceries recently I came across Weetabix in the cereal aisle. It was a bit more expensive than the cereals I normally buy, but burst of nostalgia encouraged me to pick it up. My brain was telling me things like "This will go great with the bananas at home, and the box says it has four simple ingredients, look!"
I started wondering what the four ingredients were. Whole wheat was fairly obvious, and I figured there would be a binding agent of some sort as well as a sweetener. I turned the box over to have a look at the ingredients list and found this;
That's right. Not four but seven simple ingredients. Obviously this can mean only one of 2 things. Option one is that the people working at this company are stupid and do not know that there is a difference between four and seven. A company like this should not be trusted with the task of safely producing food for human consumption. Option two is that the people at Weetabix think that their consumers are too stupid to know that there is a difference between four and seven. A company like that does not deserve my money.
I put it back on the shelf and finished my grocery run. On the drive home I kept thinking about Weetabix. Do the Weetabix boxes in Scotland say the same thing? Do they use the same recipe for the Canadian market? I turned to the internet to look for some answers.
The Canadian product uses dehydrated cane syrup as the sweetener while the British simply list sugar but also add riboflavin (vitamin B2) and folic acid. The organic versions do not contain any added vitamins or iron, though interestingly the organic version in the UK has more than double the sodium.
Perhaps one day the back of the box will be replaced with something less condescending. I hope so, because I have a bit of a craving for Weetabix and blueberries.
While shopping for groceries recently I came across Weetabix in the cereal aisle. It was a bit more expensive than the cereals I normally buy, but burst of nostalgia encouraged me to pick it up. My brain was telling me things like "This will go great with the bananas at home, and the box says it has four simple ingredients, look!"
I started wondering what the four ingredients were. Whole wheat was fairly obvious, and I figured there would be a binding agent of some sort as well as a sweetener. I turned the box over to have a look at the ingredients list and found this;
That's right. Not four but seven simple ingredients. Obviously this can mean only one of 2 things. Option one is that the people working at this company are stupid and do not know that there is a difference between four and seven. A company like this should not be trusted with the task of safely producing food for human consumption. Option two is that the people at Weetabix think that their consumers are too stupid to know that there is a difference between four and seven. A company like that does not deserve my money.
I put it back on the shelf and finished my grocery run. On the drive home I kept thinking about Weetabix. Do the Weetabix boxes in Scotland say the same thing? Do they use the same recipe for the Canadian market? I turned to the internet to look for some answers.
The Canadian product uses dehydrated cane syrup as the sweetener while the British simply list sugar but also add riboflavin (vitamin B2) and folic acid. The organic versions do not contain any added vitamins or iron, though interestingly the organic version in the UK has more than double the sodium.
Perhaps one day the back of the box will be replaced with something less condescending. I hope so, because I have a bit of a craving for Weetabix and blueberries.
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
The SnowMudder Competition
Near the end of January 2015 there was much cold weather and snow. So much snow that Tough Mudder held a contest called SnowMudder. The idea was for people to make short videos of their cold weather training routines. Some examples included resistance running through deep powdery snow in shorts and a t-shirt, doing jumping jacks beside snowblowers, and other hypothermia-defying stunts. When I saw that the prize for best video was airfare, hotel, and entry to the Tough Mudder run in Whistler, I decided to get some footage and teach myself how to edit a video.
I am rather pleased with the result, especially considering that I shot all the footage, taught myself how to use the editing software, and made the video in less than 2 days.
I'd like to quickly thank J.T. Sport for promoting the video on their Facebook page. The chainsaw and helmet are from their store.
Friday, February 20, 2015
Painting the Nursery
Back
before Malcolm was born, Allyson and I decided to paint the nursery.
Allyson found a picture online of a nursery where one wall was
painted like multicoloured checkerboard. I had a look at the
picture, determined that it was within my abilities to recreate,
bought some paint and made the room look like this:
If
you are interested in seeing how it was done, click the link below
and read on...
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