Wednesday, May 20, 2026

More Additions in 2027?

Updated My Matador Network Map

When Jay and I finally dragged our luggage back to the Lower Mainland this past March, we officially pinned the 99th and 100th countries onto the master map. It took over four decades of relentless border crossings, questionable transit hubs, and a terrifying number of passport renewals to finally hit the century mark. We never actively treated the globe like a competitive checklist. However, crossing that final threshold into triple digits felt like a profoundly satisfying bit of lifetime administration.

The rest of the calendar is certainly not lacking in forward momentum. We deploy for a full month in Morocco starting next Wednesday. We might actually exhibit a rare moment of geographical restraint and stay reasonably close to home for our respective birthdays in July and September. But by winter, the restraint completely evaporates. We will be flying to the UK merely to board a transatlantic vessel, taking the absolute slowest route possible to an Airbnb in Rio de Janeiro. We plan to occupy that Brazilian outpost for three solid months right through the glorious chaos of Carnival.

There is exactly one tragedy in this otherwise flawless logistical masterpiece. The remainder of 2026 will yield absolutely zero new additions to the map. We are entirely restricted to repeat visits. When one has already conquered a hundred sovereign territories, finding a completely untrampled horizon becomes a rather tedious burden. I suppose we will just have to dig a little deeper into the atlas next year.



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Crimson on the Concrete

Mall Roof Roses

When the little red Floribunda finally unfurled its perfectly pointed petals, it fully expected a standing ovation. Or, at the very least, a polite smattering of applause from a passing, well-heeled gardening society.

Instead, it received the rhythmic thump-thump of a stray shopping cart rolling into a concrete pillar.

The rose took a moment to assess its real estate. It was not, as it had wildly hoped as a seedling, nestled in the manicured loam of a grand botanical garden. It was wedged into a partially abandoned, slightly chipped concrete planter on the rooftop parking deck of a thoroughly average shopping mall. Its immediate neighbors were a fading yellow line and a puddle of indeterminate origin.

At first, there was a brief spike of botanical outrage.

I am a complex hybrid, the rose thought, shaking a serrated leaf in the general direction of a parked sedan. I have layers! I have a subtle, velvety gradient! I deserve a dedicated irrigation drip and a small, tasteful brass plaque!

For the first few days, the rose aggressively struck a pose, waiting for the masses to arrive and validate its existence. It threw its petals open with theatrical flair. But the grand total of its daily audience hovered around a dozen people. Most were completely preoccupied with remembering where they parked, marching past the planter with their heads buried in their phones and their hands full of reasonably priced footwear.

But then, a shift occurred.

A thoroughly exhausted retail worker, escaping the fluorescent lights for a momentary afternoon break, slumped against the concrete wall. They looked up, spotted the unapologetically vibrant crimson bloom defying the grey expanse, and let out a long, slow breath. A genuine smile broke across their face.

The rose stood a little taller. Well, it thought. That was rather nice.

The next morning, a very fuzzy, delightfully unbothered bumblebee landed squarely in the center of the bloom. The bee didn't care about foot traffic metrics or the prestige of the zip code. To the bee, this rooftop was a five-star diner, and the rose was serving the chef's tasting menu.

The rose began to reassess its position in the world.

Sure, it wasn't the centerpiece of a highly publicized horticultural tour. But the few dozen weary humans who actually noticed it seemed to genuinely need that jolt of beauty. It was an unexpected, bright rebellion against the asphalt.

The grand gardens could keep their swarming crowds and their frantic, selfie-snapping tourists. The rooftop rose realized it had inadvertently become an exclusive, boutique experience. It was providing bespoke joy to a highly curated audience of stray pollinators and observant wanderers.

It settled its roots a little deeper into the dry soil, caught the afternoon breeze, and decided it was perfectly content. After all, anybody can look beautiful surrounded by fountains. It takes real talent to pull off crimson on a concrete parking deck.



Monday, May 18, 2026

What's in a Name?

Queen's Park

The Ego of the Orange Arch

For nearly ninety years, we have been staring at that orange arch over the Fraser River and calling it the Pattullo Bridge. It opened back in 1937, right in the thick of the Great Depression, and was named after Thomas Dufferin "Duff" Pattullo, the sitting Premier of British Columbia at the time. Sticking your own surname on a massive public works project is the ultimate flex of political ego. It was the classic colonial way of doing things. You build a bridge, you completely ignore the thousands of years of human history that happened on that exact spot before you arrived, and you permanently name the steel after a guy in a suit.

Calling a Crossing a Crossing

Now we have the shiny new cable-stayed replacement, and thankfully, it abandons the politician's vanity project entirely. The new name is stal̕əw̓asəm (pronounced stah-luw-ah-sum), which comes directly from hən̓q̓əmín̓əm̓, the traditional language of the Coast Salish peoples who have been navigating these exact waters for millennia. It is a beautiful and highly literal compound word. "stal̕əw̓" means the Fraser River, and "asəm" refers to a crossing or facing across. Instead of naming a vital piece of geography after an administrator, we are finally just calling it what it actually is: the river crossing.

Correcting the Colonial Typo

This switch is about a lot more than just updating the highway signs to confuse the local traffic reporters. The old colonial habit of plastering European surnames over ancient geography was a very deliberate form of historical erasure, operating on the arrogant assumption that nothing of value existed here until the British showed up. By ditching the political branding and embracing the original hən̓q̓əmín̓əm̓ name, we are actually correcting a massive geographical typo. It is a tangible bit of reconciliation that forces every single commuter crossing between Surrey and New West to acknowledge the real history of the land, proving that occasionally, we actually do learn from our past mistakes.



Sunday, May 17, 2026

A Walk in the Sunshine

Queen's Park

Queen's Park

Queen's Park

Unlike what the weather forecasts were suggesting, it turned out to be a beautiful Sunday.  This is the the middle of our long, Victoria Day weekend.  Tomorrow will be a day off for most folks who still work.

We needed to run uptown but detoured for a small walk in our city's main park. It's always a pleasure. Queen's Park is essentially New Westminster's green lung, an absolute necessity when you are living within a dense urban grid. The city had the foresight to set aside these 75 acres back in 1887, and thankfully, they have resisted the urge to pave it over since. It is not just a passive patch of old-growth timber; it is a heavily utilized piece of civic infrastructure. Between the extensive network of walking trails, the historic Queen's Park Arena, the athletic fields, and the tennis courts, it is constantly in motion. They even maintain a spray park to manage the summer crowds and a dedicated rose garden when you just need to step away from the noise. It is a strictly functional mix of preserved nature and active utility, sitting right in our backyard.

Queen's Park

Queen's Park

Queen's Park

I love the foresight of the citizens of my city a century and a half ago.  We took a look at the Rose Garden, but I didn't take any pictures as we only spotted a few buds.  The area will erupt into a blaze of hues next month.  Further along, we took a look at the area behind a fence where the local bee association keeps their hives.  Many of the small workers were out scouting down flowers to pollinate.  Lastly, we walked on a small pedestrian bridge across a busy highway that used to lead to the Fraser River and old Pattullo bridge,  Now the traffic flows across the new stal̕əw̓asəm Bridge (also known as the Riverview Bridge).

I love my city for its small, intimate size and the close proximity to the things we require.

Queen's Park


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Using a Little Screen While Viewing the Big One

Felis Lybica 
While watching Prime's series House of David with Jayantha, my eye caught a brief, unscripted moment in the background of a scene. A tiny mouse scurried out of view in the dark corner of an ancient stone dwelling. Because the historical setting of the show is anchored firmly around 1000 BC in the Kingdom of Israel, it made me consider the domestic reality of the Levant in that era. I began to wonder about the prevalence of house cats during the early Iron Age and whether the characters on screen would have shared their quarters with feline companions to manage such pests.

A query to my digital companion revealed that the modern, pampered house cat did not exist in the ancient Levant. Instead, the local population interacted with the regional wildcat, Felis lybica, an animal that was certainly not a pet in the contemporary sense. These wildcats were leaner than today's domestic breeds, possessing longer legs and a more solitary disposition. While they were not invited to curl up by the hearth, they were highly tolerated in grain warehouses, agricultural stores, and communal dwellings because of their innate ability to keep the destructive rodent population in check. It was a relationship based entirely on mutual utility rather than affection. To visualize this historical reality, an image was generated of a feral cat of household size, depicting a sleek, vigilant predator hunting among ancient storage jars.  I had my AI create the image you see above.

The situation was markedly different just a short distance away in Egypt during this exact timeframe. By 1000 BC, the Egyptian relationship with the feline had progressed far beyond mere pest control into the realms of the sacred and the domestic. Egyptians viewed cats not merely as working animals, but as physical manifestations of divine protection, closely associated with the goddess Bastet. Felines in Egyptian households were pampered, fed scraps of fish, and treated as integral members of the family. The respect afforded to them was so absolute that the killing of a cat, even by accident, carried severe penalties, and deceased household cats were frequently mummified with great care and buried in dedicated cemeteries.

This contrast highlights the unique cultural landscape of the ancient world. While the inhabitants of ancient Israel viewed the local wildcat as a useful, distant ally against the very mice seen on television, their Egyptian neighbors had already elevated the creature to a position of luxury and divine reverence.



Friday, May 15, 2026

Fireplace or Barbecue?

The Gas Fireplace is Back On 
It is mid-May. We had switched off the gas fireplace a while back; however, now that the long weekend in Canada is nearly here, I felt the need to light it again. This morning the temperature felt cold and it's still only 9°C (48°F) and remains overcast and rainy. Tonight the temperature will drop just a couple of degrees lower, but the sun is not expected to appear at all until tomorrow morning. 

Yet, get ready to fire up the barbecue because Victoria Day arrives on Monday, May 18th, as a statutory holiday that guarantees a three-day weekend across British Columbia! Originally established way back in 1845 to celebrate Queen Victoria's birthday, this historic Monday became a fixed, nationwide holiday by an act of the Parliament of Canada in 1901 following her passing. It has happily transformed into Canada’s undisputed, unofficial kickoff to the summer season, especially after 1952, when the government smartly decreed it would always fall on the Monday preceding May 25th. 

This paid day off is officially celebrated in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Yukon, Nunavut, and the Northwest Territories. In these regions, it remains the cherished long weekend where Canadians enthusiastically dust off the patio cushions, unpack the camping gear, and boldly embrace the Great Outdoors to welcome the warm weather ahead. This makes it the absolute perfect excuse to settle in, relax, and celebrate a joyful start of the summer roadmap in style, even though we will most likely require umbrellas again in 2026.


Thursday, May 14, 2026

MIDI: For Electronic Musical Instruments & Computers

Roland S-1 Tweak Synrhesizer

Back in the early 1980s, the music world had a problem. Companies like Roland and Yamaha were making amazing electronic keyboards, but they couldn't "talk" to each other. If you bought a keyboard from one company, it wouldn't work with a drum machine from another. In 1983, these rival companies actually teamed up to create MIDI, which stands for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. They wanted a universal language so that any electronic instrument could control another, making it easier for people to make music at home on their new personal computers.  

Think of a MIDI file like a digital version of those old player piano rolls. The roll doesn't have any actual music recorded on it; it just has holes that tell the piano which keys to hit and how long to hold them. MIDI is exactly like that, but way more powerful. While a piece of sheet music is written for a human to read and interpret, a MIDI file is a list of instructions for a computer. It says "Play middle C at this exact volume for exactly two seconds." Because these files are just data, one MIDI file can have dozens of "tracks" playing at once,  It's like having a whole band or orchestra in one file but it can even include instructions to dim the stage lights or open the curtains at the perfect moment.  Because these files are simple instructions having no recorded sounds, they are often tiny, smaller than one digital photograph.

The biggest difference between MIDI and the sheet music you’d see for a pop song is how they handle the "feel." Sheet music gives a musician the basic idea, but the player decides exactly how to swing the rhythm or how softly to press the keys. MIDI used to be very stiff and "robotic" because it followed a digital clock perfectly. However, modern technology has fixed this. Today’s digital instrument libraries use something called "round robins." This means that instead of having just one recording of a guitar string being plucked, the computer has ten different recordings of that same note. Every time you play the song, the computer randomly picks one of those recordings.  

Because of this randomness, a MIDI performance doesn't have to be an identical, perfect loop. By slightly varying the timing and picking different samples of the same note, the computer can make a song sound human and "live" rather than like a machine. It takes the basic instructions of the "score" and adds those tiny, natural imperfections that make music feel real. Of course, MIDI files can also handle a synthesizer to create electronic noises and use 'sampled' non-musical sounds rather than relying on a bundled instrument library.

In today’s world, MIDI has become the essential backbone of the music industry because it offers a level of flexibility that traditional recording simply cannot match. It allows a single creator to act as an entire production team; tweaking a note’s pitch, changing the "instrument" from a piano to a violin with one click, or even automating the stage lights for a live show. By turning musical ideas into manageable data, MIDI ensures that the process of composing is as fast and adaptable as the digital world in which we live.



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Long & McQuade

Visit to Long & McQuade

This morning I hopped on a SkTrain bound for the Main Street / Science World SkyTrain Station. My destination was Long & McQuade on Terminal Street in Vancouver.  They are Canadian dealers for musical equipment and had one of the few, tiny, remaining Roland S-1 Synthesizers available in all of BC, I think.  The Surrey branch would've been closer but the item was out of stock.

It was of no matter because going to that part of downtown Vancouver takes exactly 25 minutes by SkyTrain from New West.  I walked five minutes from the station, bought the synth, and returned home in under an hour.
  Visit to Long & McQuade

Visit to Long & McQuade

Oh my.  The picture doesn't do the retail section of the store justice.  It felt cavernous but fully packed with musical equipment.  It was the first time I'd ever been in their doors.  The day started off a bit rainy but had pretty much cleared up by 10:15 am.

Visit to Long & McQuade

Now I have a new little toy to play with.  The tiny 'synth' and the software I loaded on my computer for manipulation of sound and midi files should keep me learning new things for quite a stretch.  I love finding out about new things.  Accidently discovering more about the topic of electronic music last week seemed like prying the curtains back on a secret little club that nobody had ever mentioned to me.  Earlier today, I wrote to friends in Whatsapp (using a perfectly acceptable double negative and ending with a preposition):
"There's nothing that I don't want to learn, at least, a little bit about."


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