That's right: ALL OF THEM.
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Now that Didcot Power Station has been mostly levelled, with its remaining three cooling towers demolished in spectacular fashion last Sunday, I can’t shake the feeling that something has been lost.
The feeling intensified when I stumbled upon Kit Wright’s wonderful 2014 poem, An Ode to Didcot Power Station: What vasty thighs outspread to give thee birth, DIDCOT, thou marvel of the plain? Colossal funnels of the steamship EARTH, Thy consummate immensity Enshrines the rare propensity Of fumes to form eternal acid rain! While, in their pious hosts, Romano-Celtic ghosts Are knelt to worship thy All-belching amphorae, And shadows of thy sacrificial breathing fill the sky! DIDCOT, thou bugger! Thou teaser of the mind And recollection-tugger! Thee I find To replicate the days when I was small What time my mother, sweet and kind, The fragrant Friar's Balsam did infuse. She therewithal A towel placed upon my head And loving care did use That pulmonary perils might not wake me with the dead. DIDCOT! To one more Soft eidolon thou steam'st ope mem'ry's door ... For in thy hanging shrouds I view return Far other blue-grey clouds; My father's pipe-smoke I in thee discern, Companion true, That followed him all days And ways he ventured through this singing maze, To take that turn All entrants in their bafflement and grace may not eschew. What links of tenderness are forged by thee, DIDCOT, thou ever-burning core! Insensate lover of the loves that flee! Thou glade of past felicity, Thy sap of electricity Complicit in our veins for evermore! Struggling anent the storm, thy children ghost the form Of all our quickenings may ever be ... DIDCOT, thy billows pour, Connatural, contiguous, familial as the sea! The power station was never pretty, aesthetically or environmentally. To be honest, you'd be hard-pressed to find a better example of a blot on the landscape, what with the landscape in question being so pleasing to the eye. My late grandfather Harry, for one, despised the power station. An avid painter of English landscapes, he resented its grey brooding presence. As a child visiting from Canada, however, I grew to associate the plump concrete smoke stacks with summers of non-stop fun. I spent much of my childhood bouncing between the homes of grandparents, cousins and summer friends in Drayton, Sutton Courtney, Steventon, and the other villages and towns on and around England's rolling Wiltshire Downs. I've been back several times as an adult — twice as a father — and still revel in revisiting the diversions of my youth: The Uffington White Horse prehistoric hill figure; Wittenham Clumps, a pair of wooded hills and ancient forts that once afforded superb views of the power station; the footpaths around the Thames weirs at Sutton Courtney; and even the modest Sutton Wick duck pond in Drayton. This is one of the most underrated parts of England. Millions of visitors take day trips from London to the Cotswold Hills and Stonehenge — both less than an hour's drive from the Drayton Triangle, as I call it — as well as to Oxford, the world-famous university city 20 minutes north. It could be that Didcot Power Station has caused tourists to bypass the area. If so, I owe it a debt of gratitude for the uncrowded pubs, serene villages and countryside, and relative lack of tour buses in the Triangle. These days, I also derive great pleasure from bringing my daughters along, and watching as they gaze wide-eyed at the White Horse's 110-metre-long chalk body, or hurl crusts of bread into the swirling Thames, drawing ducks by the dozens. Relatives who still live in the Triangle chuckle when I outline our repetitive itinerary. It probably seems quaint — boring, even — when compared with the sights of London or even those of Oxford. But I will never tire of the Triangle, or of reliving those halcyon days and sharing them with my family. I would have liked to have been among the thousands of spectators who turned out for the final implosion. My grandfather, however, would have been there no matter what. Harry would have cheered loudly, no doubt, having invariably excluded the power station from his bucolic watercolours. But next time I snap a photo from the top of Wittenham Clumps, I may just Photoshop it in. You came into our lives one night By waddling down our street We knew you were a duckling You had a beak and cute webbed feet You ran under a parked Toyota I found a box to put you in Some guy used a broom to nab you He was like Gretzky with that thing! My daughters were beyond excited “A duckling! In my room!” I told them that they couldn’t touch you As that would seal your doom A nest was fashioned, tout de suite From towels and serviettes I’m pretty sure, were I not there They would have fed you Chex A Google search soon revealed A duckling-friendly menu So milk, and peas, and boiled egg Were added to your venue You started swimming in the milk And churned it like a blender Then scattered peas and egg around Like Bieber on a bender We needed Animal Services I dialed the free hotline And as I did, “Can we keep him?” Was repeated 16 times “Ducklings are wild animals,” Came my stern reply “He’d be unhappy living here He’d never learn to fly.” “What about the duck on Friends?” Asked Grace, full of defiance, “If Joey can look after one, It can’t be rocket science.” “Rest assured, my daughter dear,” I quickly bantered back As soon as “Joey” leaves the set Duck wranglers pick up the slack “That’s it!” cried Ava, eyes aglow “Duck wrangling is my dream! Father, please don’t kill my hopes Like adamantium killed Wolverine.” Just in time, the Muzak ended A real person came online “It’s after-hours,” he said politely, “Five hours is the wait time.” Given the lateness of the hour, I guessed this meant next morning So after closing Ducky’s box I joined my family in withdrawing I awoke, saw on my phone The voicemail tab alight Cameron from Animal Services Had come by after midnight So I called and left a message Then I took the girls aside “When you get home from school,” I said, “Ducky may not here reside.” “Ontario Wildlife Rescue Will provide his new abode He’ll be much happier there, my dears Not waddling down the road.” “‘We saved him!’ That’s the takeaway!” Were my parting words Disconsolate, they turned away Thinking me absurd So I waited, with my ringer on For Cameron to return He prefers to go by “The Avian Assassin” As we would later learn It could be that’s the reason Our duck guest seemed quite neurotic Leaping against his cardboard walls He was almost robotic Eat some egg, jump for thirty Drink some milk, make nest dirty Jump for thirty, eat some peas Ducky, quit this jumping, please! Then wee Ducky, he started peeping As first I felt my eardrums bleeding But as I listened to his pleas My urge to keep him did increase This went on for about six hours What eating, jumping, and peeping powers! Then in the door came Ava and Gracie Followed by Evie, Pam and Stacey After them came Peg and Sue Then a minute later, Ivy Blue Not Blue Ivy of Queen B fame You get the idea just the same My kitchen was crammed full of kids The duck was starring in 14 vids Eating peas, then jumping lots Was going to kill it on Tik Tok At dinner, Ducky, half awake Seemed to be resigned to his fate And resolutely hunkered down In his makeshift apartment brown Then at the door there came a knock Cameron, adding to his flock “Evening, all,” he said, quite plucky, “Now tell me, girls, WHERE’S THE DUCKY?” Cam’s approach was poorly planned He came across like Slenderman The girls, now scarred, quickly retreated Their tear ducts soon to be depleted “Hold on, girls,” Cam said, polite “Check out this FAWN from just last night Her mom got hit by a passing Jeep Then we found her in a yard, asleep.” Cam produced his sticky phone Revealing the mystery of this poem A fawn, awake, its eyes imploring Soon our Ducky became quite boring Cam, he quickly grabbed the box And said, “My work is done here, boss” Then turned and ambled out the door My family was duck-less, once more The girls, dreaming of fawns, retired Never thinking that Cam had conspired To trick them with fawn stock photos Good thing we were dealing with pros Before she closed her eyes, Grace said, “Can we get a dog instead?” Then she started singing “Bingo” I’m sure she’d take a rabid dingo Dingos, I’d turn down these days Along with pure-breds, pups and strays Any pet is out of luck With one exception: Any kind of duck. “We three kings of Orient are Bearing gifts we traverse afar Field and fountain Moor and mountain Following yonder star…” The Crash Test Dummies’ baritonal rendition of the holiday classic jingles out of the rental-car stereo just as Sommet Saint-Sauveur’s starry lights come into view. It’s just past 4pm on Dec. 23, and as usual I’m driving from the Central Train Station in Montreal to the family chalet near Mont Tremblant. Sauveur’s night-skiing operations, and others like them, have been lighting my way along the Laurentian Autoroute for years. But unlike the biblical Magi, who famously followed a star, I have always bypassed the valley’s beckoning beacons. Not so this year. With ski gear in the trunk, fresh flakes on the highway and a few hours to spare, some warm-up laps sound like just the thing before hitting the slopes of Eastern Canada’s largest ski resort. It turns out to be one of the best pit-stops I’ve ever made. So great, in fact, that I’ve taken three more detours along the Corduroy Highway, as I’ve come to call it, since then. There’s certainly no shortage of options: With a dozen impeccably-groomed hills lining the 70 kilometres of blacktop between between Sauveur and Tremblant, the Riviere du Nord valley is home to Canada's densest concentration of ski areas, all of which are making the most of 2019 spring skiing thanks to one of the best snowfall seasons on record. This ski-area abundance goes back to the late 19th century, when the P'tit Train du Nord railway line — now Canada’s longest multi-use rail trail — first linked Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts and Montreal. This made it much easier for city-dwellers to explore the region, which became even more popular when one of North America’s first mechanical ski lifts was installed on Mont Saint-Sauveur in 1934. In those early years local hotels tended to operate their own lifts, many of which serviced single runs. No wonder more than 220 ski operations are said to have opened in the valley since 1900. Another pleasant surprise: Despite their proximity and shared Laurentian setting, the four resorts I’ve sampled so far are pleasingly varied, with histories, personalities, terrain, cuisine and quirks all their own. What makes each worthy of much more than a pit-stop? Here’s what I’ve discovered so far: Sommet Saint-Sauveur The record-setting extent of Sauveur’s nightskiing hits home as I stand at the top of the L’Atomic Expresshigh-speed quad. Radiating outward like the spokes of a massive whitewashed wagon wheel, the six wonderfully groomed runs below me might account for the full extent of evening descents at many much larger ski areas. At Sauveur, however, more than 70 per cent of the 40 trails are illuminated, yielding 48 hectares of floodlit terrain — reputed to be the most extensive on Earth. My nocturnal opportunities feel limitless. To the left and right, beginner-friendly traverses lead to seven more of Sauveur’s lifts, as well as to the three that climb adjoining Sommet Avila. I charge down the single-black Côte 70 Est in front of me as if the world’s last remaining order of poutine is waiting for me at the bottom. Thankfully, Sauveur’s stylish T-Bar 70 restaurant has plenty of fresh cheese curds and gravy on hand, as well as the breaded chicken strips, crispy bacon and pepper sauce it adds to its signature version of Quebec’s famous dish. A crisp Griffintown craft pilsner caps my pit stop within a pit stop, and I head back out to carve down groomer after groomer. CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY IN SKI CANADA MAGAZINE Last year, I learned a valuable lesson in Ellicottville: Craft beer is obliterating the stereotype that American brews are weak and watery. Now, I'm learning something else: A private ski resort isn't always a private ski resort. Eighteen months after our first visit to charming Ellicottville, the brood and I are back to check out nearby HoliMont, the largest private ski area in the United States (by membership). The good news for non-members like us is that HoliMont is open to the public on weekdays, which is how we've been able to ski there. The resort's 46 trails and eight lifts are providing some textbook spring skiing, with the welcoming atmosphere enhanced by stone fireplaces in the expansive main lodge and floor-to-ceiling windows facing the snowy slopes. Spring skiing, especially with children who are learning to snowboard, provides a natural excuse to enjoy a beer or three. And as is the case with 12.6 percent of Ontario March Breaks, St. Patrick's Day just happens to be the very last day of this year's nine-day parental gauntlet. Good thing the Ellicottville Brewing Co.'s wares are so well-represented at nearby Holiday Valley, the largest public ski area in New York State. The eponymous lodge's raucous T-Bar lounge pours a Ski Bum hoppy ale and a Blueberry Wheat Ale garnished with real berries. Next door, the fifth outpost of the Massachusetts-based John Harvard's Brewery is home to 20-plus taps, including a decadent Chocolate Cherry Bomb Imperial Stout produced by Ellicottville Brewing. Craft beers multiply exponentially during the annual Holiday Valley Beer and Wine Festival, when more than 30 brewers crowd the resort's base area each November. For even more sudsy variety, EBC's stylish dining and entertainment complex serves up flights and brewery tours. READ MORE OF MY CRAFT BEER-MEETS-SKIING STORY IN THE GLOBE AND MAIL After years of bitter disappointment, my daughter Grace finally received a GT Snowracer from Santa this past Christmas. Then, after weeks of bitter disappointment, there was finally enough snow on the ground this weekend to use the sweet steerable sled. Grace was fired up, but only slightly more fired up than I was. After all, I loved my 1980s Snowracer even more than I adored my Green Machine. The GT has got to be one of the most enduringly popular winter toys of all time. Since its invention in the early 1970s, the Snowracer's manufacturer, Stiga, has gone on to produce SX Pro models with BMX-style handlebars for more extreme sledding. The GT model is the classic, however, and as I watched Grace and her buddies hurtle down the short-but-steep slope at Toronto's Rennie Park it occurred to me that I have no idea what "GT" actually stands for. A quick Wikipedia search reveals that the acronym typically means "grand touring" in the automotive industry, with GT models offering higher-performance engines and more comfortable interiors designed for long trips. But with its hard plastic seat and gravity-based propulsion system, this doesn't really apply to the Snowracer. So, with Stiga ignoring my voice mails, emails and sky writing, I've developed a few theories as to the origin of the Snowracer's initials: Golden Trousers: Swedish engineer Erland "Golden Trousers" Wikner is credited with having invented the Snowracer. Guaranteed Terror: What you get when you put a nine-year-old on a Snowracer and send it down a snowy hill teeming with approximately 400 other excited kids. G&T: What daddy needs after an afternoon of snowracing. Generous THC: What daddy needs after an afternoon of snowracing. Gaaah-Thunk: The sound of two Snowracers colliding (and their warranties being simultaneously voided). Grace Tolja: Like when Grace said, "I tolja Santa knows how to make fast toys!" .gt: The Internet country code top-level domain for Guatemala. Good Thing: As in, "Good thing for the brake, or that sled would be in Scarborough by now." Giggle at Toronto: What the rest of Canada does whenever it snows enough to actually use a Snowracer here. It’s too bad CBD massages weren’t as much of a thing in 2004, when I wrote several spa reviews for the Globe and Mail’s now-defunct “World of Wellbeing” column. After all, the two therapists who subjected me to my first (and last) "Mystical Water Ride" probably could have used one. Then as now, I took great pride in telling it like it was. Exactly how moist were the towelettes? Did the shower jets tickle or sting? How well did the piped-in pan-flute complement the live mandolin? I had the spa scoop when it counted. But there was one isolated incident I never reported. For one thing, it wasn’t really review material. For another, it was spectacularly embarrassing for everyone involved. Then again, those tend to be best stories, so here goes: Shortly after checking into Port Severn’s lovely Christie’s Mill Inn, I made my way to the 7,000-square-foot Avalon spa for my Mystical Water Ride. The brand-new treatment started off swimmingly: After stripping down and being vigorously scrubbed and slathered in warm seaweed — behind curtains that somehow maintained my modesty — I was wrapped in towels, placed on a gurney and left to marinate for about half an hour. Next, the gurney was wheeled under the seven high-powered jets of a Vichy shower. The two female attendants unwrapped me with the greatest discretion and care, and momentarily left the room so I could cover my naughty bits with an adequate-seeming face towel. The idea was that the shower would exfoliate my skin and remove the seaweed. But it also removed the face towel. In my near-comatose state, I was initially oblivious to the kerfuffle this caused. I did notice that the flow of water had ceased, and out of the corner of my eye I saw one of the attendants scamper across the room to retrieve my terrycloth fig leaf. It was delicately repositioned, the shower was restarted, and the towel was again blasted to the far side of the room. It turned into a strange kind of repetitive dance: Rearrange towel, turn on water, towel goes flying, retrieve towel. It didn’t bother me much: I’m not especially modest, and the water was warm enough to avoid the Seinfeldian shrinkage all men fear. The attendants, however, seemed mortified, even after I mumbled that I didn’t really care about the towel as long as the powerful shower jets weren't aimed at the area it was covering. After about 15 towel retrievals the shower was over and I was quickly, and perhaps too securely, wrapped in several larger towels. I felt smooth, clean, tingly and generally wonderful. The bedraggled spa attendants, however, looked like they had been blasted with water cannons. Shortly thereafter, I noticed that Avalon had stopped offering the "Mystical Water Ride." So I have to wonder: Was I the first, and last, Mystical Water Rider? With my first full year of (borderline successful) full-time freelancing (almost) behind me, here’s how I see the eight days BEFORE Dec. 25 shaping up as I continue to work from home: On the first day of Christmas, some guy emailed me Asking that I work for free On the second day of Christmas, the guy referred to me As "Dear Allan Bixby" And again asked that I work for free On the third day of Christmas, three clients mailed to me Greeting cards saying "Dear Adam Bisby" Means a lot to know they value me On the fourth day of Christmas, the CRA sent me Four HST forms Three payment docs Two veiled threats And a note about interest fees On the fifth day of Christmas, I read a nifty tweet (About the) Five Golden Rules!!!!! (of freelancing): Never miss deadlines Always show up Be low-maintenance Do good work and don’t do it for free On the sixth day of Christmas, I had a lovely dream: Six-figure salaries Five golden handshakes!!!!! Four soaring stocks Three health plans Two pension funds And a chalet near Lake Louise On the seventh day of Christmas, my true love sent to me Seven pounds of coffee Six iPhone chargers Five Golden Brooms!!!!! Four "sick day" nooners Three bath bombs Two mental notes And a new bathrobe already On the eighth day of Christmas, my two kids gave to me Eight playdate pickups Seven missing backpacks Six permission forms Five (requests for) golden retrievers!!!!! Four data overages Three French tests Two turtle deaths And two reasons to rock 2019... The Bisby clan was in high spirits last night after witnessing a stirring third-period comeback by the Intelliware Warriors, who earned their first point of the Swansea Girls Hockey League season. Grace, our nine-year-old Mitch Marner wannabe, was pleased to have registered her first shot on goal (and 47th cross-check). Her big sister Ava was pleased that we were on our way to her favourite coffee shop for hot chocolate. Angela and I were pleased to have avoided both frostbite and SGHL disciplinary action while watching the outdoor game. As we drove north from Rennie Park Ice Rink, a sudden flash of greenish light illuminated the clear night sky ahead of us. At first I thought it was a distressed aircraft, but its blazing speed instantly put paid to that theory. Milliseconds after we spotted it, the fiery object seemed to splinter before disappearing behind the storefronts lining Bloor Street West. The next morning I checked Twitter, and lo and behold, dozens of others had also seen (and reported) the 9:15pm light show. Then I clicked over to GlobeandMail.com, and lo and behold, my Travel story on winter stargazing had just been posted. In fact, it was posted at almost exactly the same time as the meteor’s spectacular demise. That, my friends, is what keeps me showing up for work every other afternoon. Should I have chosen differently? The question springs to mind atop Keystone Resort’s Independence Bowl. Sure, it would have been sensible to start the 2017-18 season at a smaller eastern hill. With my new Epic Pass stashed in my left glove’s zip pocket there are several I could have picked. Woulda, coulda, shoulda. My gelatinous desk-job quads and lack of big-mountain prep make the 250 vertical metres of Colorado powder below me almost as daunting as they are thrilling. Almost, but not quite: Excitement inches ahead of trepidation during the snowcat ride up, then takes full control midway through my first turn. Five heady descents later I spot the self-proclaimed “World’s Largest Snow Fort” as Keystone Adventure Tours’ cat-ski excursion returns to the top of Dercum Mountain. Suddenly I miss the brood back home, and the feeling lingers as I ski past the H&H Mining Camp, one of six Kids’ Adventure Zones where bridges and tunnels turn the slopes into a snowy playground. An hour’s drive west of Denver, Keystone bolsters its family-oriented reputation with the annual Kidtopia festival, 3,000-plus condos in five slopeside villages, and wintry superlatives such as the turreted snow fort, a five-acre skating lake billed as the largest in the U.S., and a six-lane tube park that, at 3,548 metres above sea level, is said to be the loftiest on Earth. All signs point to a stellar 2018-19 season, with the resort opening early — on Nov. 7 — for the first time in nearly a decade thanks to nearly four feet of snow since the middle of October. By the time I arrive at the Keystone Ranch for dinner, I’m pining more for my spouse than for my offspring. Housed in a 1930s log cabin with a soaring stone fireplace, the steakhouse and lounge is about as cosy and romantic as it gets. And on this evening, there isn’t a chicken finger in sight. As the ski season unfolds, it starts to resemble a “Choose Your Own Adventure” novel in which I am both decision-maker and protagonist. But instead of turning to Page 47 and being transformed into a newt — or some such bizarre fictional outcome — my Epic Pass compels me to hop planes to Colorado, Vermont and British Columbia, where I am transformed into a snow-clad, grinning blur. To find out how the rest of my inaugural Epic winter unfolded, check out the story in the Globe and Mail... |
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December 2023
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