Category Archives: Potpourri

Happy birthday to Blue

Four years ago we bought a betta fish for Avery as a reward for giving up her soother. Since her soother’s name was Blue-blue, she named her betta fish after it, naturally.

Blue-blue in his prime near his third birthday.

Blue-blue in his prime near his third birthday.

Blue-blue is now four years old and when we tell other parents how long we’ve had the fish their first question is, “Is it the original fish?” Yes. A quick Google search reveals that the average life span of a betta is between two and six years, in fact. Still, it’s pretty much a miracle Blue-blue’s still with us. Sometimes we forget to feed him. We often go three weeks between bowl cleanings. He was even uprooted from his home during the Calgary flood.

But Blue-blue keeps on swimming twice a day to retrieve his little food pellets from the top of the bowl. Between meals he kind of lays on his side at the bottom. He’s also changing colours; from a lustrous purple-blue to a mottled purple-grey. He looks like he’s dying, a fact that is not lost on Avery.

betta fish

Blue-blue on the bottom of the bowl, next to this ominous note written by Avery about a week ago.

They say the death of a pet is one way to teach kids about the cycle of life. I wonder, will Avery mourn Blue-blue like she did the soother he replaced? Or will her first question be, “Now can I get an eel?” I have a feeling that when our geriatric betta fish finally passes on and is flushed into the dark reaches of the Calgary sewer system, we as a family will have only learned one lesson:

Dogs are way better pets than fish. (And no, you can’t have an eel.)

Meanwhile, in Calgary…

It’s been seven months since the Bow River flooded our basement and eroded the road in front of our home. But — yay! — our basement renovation is finally complete. We chose new carpets for the rooms, new tiles for the tub surround and walled in the TV room, but for the most part it’s just how it was — down to the paint colours. We’ve even hung our travel photos in all the same spots. We have, however, acquired a permanent artistic reminder of the YYCFLOOD: the Meanwhile in Calgary poster by KeliGirl that circulated on social media during the crisis.

Our new framed print will  remind to man the sump pump during future flood events.

Our new framed print will remind us to man the sump pump during future flood events, lest a hippo pay us a visit.

For all those long months of summer and fall we were without a TV and made due less a guest bedroom,  guest bath, entryway and storage room. We parked one car down the block (half of the garage was filled with refugee furniture and toys) and the kids got by with half of their toys boxed up.

We walled in the TV room and added this art-glass door. The return of our entry lockers = bliss!

We walled in the TV room and added this art-glass door. The return of our entry lockers = bliss!

But the thing is, we adapted. We watched Netflix on the laptop, turned Avery’s room into a welcoming suite when guests were in town (she bunked with us), and got accustomed to entering the house through the side door into the kitchen. Those refugee toys? The kids forgot all about them. The basement became a mysterious, plastic-sheeted-off reno zone that we rarely entered. We realized that we don’t need as much living space as we thought we did.

The kids LOVE having the basement back. Avery is enthralled with the new TV.

The kids LOVE having the basement back. Avery is enthralled with the new TV.

Having said all that though, it’s sure nice to have our basement back. I’ll take the space and learn to spread out again. Plus, there’s more than enough room for our new generator, which will power the sump pump and keep the water at bay should there be a “next time.” Take that, Bow River!

My man’s growing a mo!

Sporting eight days of stubble after climbing Mount Kilimanjaro last year, my husband Blake could hardly wait to have a hot shower and a shave when we arrived back in Arusha. But instead of completely shaving off his mountain-man facial hair, he left the fledgling moustache in place, as a joke for our fellow trekkers when we joined them for celabratory beers at the hotel bar.

Turns out the joke was on him, as seemingly no one noticed his attempt at being ironic — or his thin and wispy ‘stache. Eight days was simply not enough time to properly grow the hair on his upper lip. This time around, Blake has a whole month to grow a mo, as he recently signed up to be a “Mo Bro” during the annual Movember campaign. Will anyone besides his mortified family members notice this facial affront to all-things-suave? We’ll see.

Mo Peach Fuzz is the name of Blake's Movember team.

Mo Peach Fuzz is the name of Blake’s Movember team.

Blake got the idea to grow a mo during the Movember launch party at Libertine Public House in Calgary in October. He wants to raise money for men’s health and also to spice up our love life (we’ll see how that goes). The annual campaign uses that in-your-face symbol of manhood — the moustache — to get people talking. Blake’s ‘stache will no doubt be a conversation starter. If you’d like to help out, please donate to Blake Ford at Mo Peach Fuzz.

My husband is no stranger to facial hair. When we travelled around Asia in 1995-96 Blake not only grew his hair down to his shoulders to spite a hair dresser who’d told him prior to departure that he’d never achieve pony tail-length locks — he grew a beard.

Bearded and be-toqued in Nepal.

Bearded and be-toqued in Nepal.

Then, rather liking the look of hair around his mouth, Blake sported a van dyke — the more handsome sibling to a goatee — from about 2002 until 2007.

Avery loved the van dyke.

Avery loved the van dyke.

He’s remained clean-shaven ever since, except for those times when — as in Africa — hot running water and a mirror weren’t readily available. The rules for Movember dictate that the moustache not adjoin any hair on the chin; it must be a stand-alone mo. So a van dyke is out, but a ‘stache with a soul patch or big mutton chops is a possibility. Another question is which style of moustache should Blake grow? The Lanny McDonald and Fu Manchu are out of the question, given the time constraints. Which leaves us with the Clark Gable, Magnum P.I. or Hitler (never very popular, as you can imagine). Feel free to weigh in!