North of 60°

“This is the Law of the Yukon, that only the Strong shall thrive; That surely the Weak shall perish, and only the Fit survive.” — Robert Service

The 2010 Dawson City Music Festival in just a few seconds.

Carole and I are excited to be attending our my first Dawson City Music Festival this July: the tickets and room are bought and booked.

We then checked out the proposed slate of bands, and if you should happen to open all of the links on that page at once, something like the following will burst forth from your speakers:

Twenty-eight ungodly seconds of the 2010 DCMF (630KB MP3)

Listening to ‘em all at once is a real time-saver.

Or, if you respond better to an overload of visual stimuli, here are all of the bands’ glamour shots stacked one on top of another. Try to spot your faves:

This sort of thing would be much more common if the concept of time did not exist.

Oh, and why is it that every band has a MySpace page? I though the trend-setters had long ago moved to Facebook. Although, judging by some of the bands’ websites, “trend-setting” is far from the correct term when it comes to Internet presence.

“Springtime is the land awakening. The March winds are the morning yawn.”

"If spring came but once a century instead of once a year, or burst forth with the sound of an earthquake and not in silence, what wonder and expectation there would be in all hearts to behold the miraculous change."

"Is it so small a thing To have enjoy'd the sun, To have lived light in the spring, To have loved, to have thought, to have done."

"Spring has returned. The Earth is like a child that knows poems."

With apologies to Lewis Grizzard, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Matthew Arnold, and Rainer Maria Rilke, respectively.

Home again after six weeks Outside.

Home at last. Who decided on that French translation?

What a lovely day to return to the Territory. I should’ve been back late last night, but a sudden soggy snow squall in Ottawa stranded the airplane on the runway for five hours. The Air Canada staff made the wait almost bearable — with free drinks, good humour, and frequent women’s hockey gold medal updates — and also booked me on this morning’s flight north and even put me up in an airport hotel in Vancouver for the night. Quite a feat considering the matter of that trifling sporting event going on down there at the moment.

Now its time to relax for a couple of days, and then re-start the year from scratch.

Many thanks to those who passed along condolences to Carole and me. Much appreciated.

A point in favour of small northern homes over larger southern ones: no hot water tap is ever that far from the water heater.

Whitehorse Google Street View may still need a little work.

I guess I’m homesick, as I’ve been virtually wandering through Google’s Street View map of Whitehorse since discovering it yesterday. But it does have its eccentricities.

For example, try “driving” north on 2nd Avenue from Main Street. When you pass the little alleyway between the TD and Thredz, suddenly you’re transported to the alley between the Burns building and Horwoods. Just push through and you’ll be delivered back to 2nd again.

Something similar happens further on down 2nd: just as you come to And Again on the right, you’re redirected to the dumpsters behind the Roadhouse.

Same deal going north on 3rd from Lambert. Halfway to Elliot you seem to be thrown into a tree behind the Log Cabin Church.

At the very least, the Street View camera vehicle seems to have done a thorough job: running up and down every back alley that is, or isn’t, on a map. Now they just need to stitch them together at the correct coordinates.

Apparently some other Canadian towns are now on Street View as well, including Inuvik.

Quirky though it may be, I’ve been using Street View extensively while down south to locate landmarks for navigating through these congested and forbidding cities. It’ll be a relief to come home to little traffic, to angle parking, and to a street map that fits comfortably into a single human head (with the possible exception of those weird-o twisty streets in the middle of Riverdale).

Whitehorse Google Street View now available.

I’ve been Outside for the past six weeks (still in lovely, yet soggy, Ottawa), but just noticed that Google’s Street View for Whitehorse has been enabled:


View Larger Map

Scene of a recent, suspicious fire, or so a little birdy tells me.