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Tuesday, 31 December 2013

Happy New Year, everyone!

Today is the last day of 2013! Remember last year, we all thought we were going to die? How far we've come. Good for you humanity.

A lot of things happened this year, I won't go on and tell you them all. Or maybe I'll name a few.

1. I moved in with some lovely people, and have a new place to call home.
2. I got my first ever job!
3. I gained a wonderful relationship.
4. And I've managed to survive some of the toughest times of my life.

Successful year. But, like all things, you have to make some improvements. Although, I know, in a few short weeks my resolutions will be last thing on my mind, I would like to share some of the things I'd like to improve on.

1. Improve my GPA. 

Last year, I made a resolution of making the Deans List. A personal goal of mine. I want to do well in school. People often scoff at me about me wanting to better, but, hey, some of us have to be over-achievers to compensate for the under-achievers.

2. Go outside more. 



I am not a very social person. For me, staying in, in a quiet room, watching a movie with my boyfriend is all the more being then being out with a group of people. Don't get me wrong, I love my friends, but I am a private person. Outdoors would be my goal to step away from being so private and enjoying nature.

3. Looking after myself better. 

I have diabetes. And I need to look after it better. End of story.

4. Manage my money better. 

I ran into financial crisis this year. I hit hard times, and managing my money is a good way to curb that issue for good. I need to pay attention to what I'm spending, and the difference between needing and wanting something /unnecessary/.

5. Love more, trust more. 

As I mentioned above, I found love in someone this year. I love him more then words. He helps me whenever I'm down, up, upside down. I have a lot of trust issues and it causes sometimes tough times between us. But we care about each other a lot, and I owe it to myself and him to love more, trust more. 




Happy New Year, everyone!
~ N 


Thursday, 26 December 2013

My personal favourite thing: food!

I hope everyone's holidays were as enjoyable as mine. I got lots of things this Christmas, which makes me thankful.

Christmas is filled with all kinds of things. My personal favorite thing: food! 

We set up our Christmas tree a little late this year, mostly because my parents like to wait for me to come home, and because I had work, I was home a closer to Christmas. But my tree was huge.

My dog likes to have his butt in all my photos. He thinks he is photogenic.

We also did some baking, though, I believe two of our cheese cakes didn't turn out, we did have one successful cheese cake. And, it's cherry my favorite.

And because I'm classy, and always do things backwards, it's the French side.

I got some new clothes, which I love. My mother embraces my weird hipster ways. She got me some great tops, and these high-waist-ed vintage looking jeans. I was pretty impressed with her clothes choices.




Christmas day was great, and if I do say so myself, I look great!

I visited both my parents grandparents. They each had huge suppers. Like huge turkey suppers. Not that I'm complaining! I finished my visits with a Richards White, surrounded by family.


It was really great beer. I was impressed.

The rest of the night was spent in my pajamas that I got for Christmas watching 2 Broke Girls, one of my newest television obsessions. Speaking of, I should get back to finishing off the second season.

Happy Holidays,
~ N 



Saturday, 21 December 2013

Cest la vie!

I've completed all my exams.

I finished the semester with two A's, an A-, a very disappointing B+ and a B-

The B- was just lack of interest in the course. I was shoved in there last minute. As a requirement for something that is no longer my major. But, I will redeem myself next semester. Hopefully. Sometimes working and school is a bad idea. But, cest la vie.

I'm now on holidays. Thank the lord!

But I few things have happened since then.

I got some Christmas gifts from my boyfriend, including glasses, boots and canvases to cure my addiction/obsession with painting.




Those are my new Ray Bans. Thanks to my boyfriend, I can now see. As my vision is no long as "good as it once was"

Also I look awesome in that photo.

I got some fresh vegetables at the market. So I decided to be inspired and make my own batch of homemade soup.


                                     
It was super delicious. I'll post the recipe soon. Check out my other recipes for now.

The weather is also hugely crazy! We've gotten so much snow in this area. I had so much trouble arranging away home this year!



I also made good use of the gift my boyfriend, Leonard, bought me. I found a picture of this abstract/faceless ballerina. It struck me as something symbolic yet, I'm sure just what yet. I made another one, it was a colorful expression of my exam-time stress. 



~ N 


Thursday, 5 December 2013

HEY A BUTTERBALL COUPON, WHO DOESN'T LOVE BUTTERBALL?

I figured a slightly entertaining thing to post would be about the odd things I like to buy when I go grocery shopping.

Things like pizza pockets. Highly unhealthy for you, but just satisfying enough to buy them for 1.99! 


I enjoy eggs as well, eggs, something I could probably procure myself are extremely expensive. Like over 3 dollars a cartoon. Luckily, this cartoon was small, filled with omega three and under three dollars. Boo-yeah!

Jones soda! One of the greatest things I've ever discovered. This kind is green apple soda, I prefer pomegranate soda. But this was my choice for this shopping trip. Also, pomegranate soda has no sugar in it. Plus for the diabetic! 



Rice, well, instant rice is an addiction of mine. I like to make it with salmon, or Indian butter chicken, or over hamburger helper (soon to be aired in this post). 


I have an addiction to box potatoes. Ever since I started university, regular non-box potatoes have been hard to purchase. Not enough demand to cook them, too expensive to buy them, so for the last two years, I've been living off box potatoes. Unhealthy but good, and HEY A BUTTERBALL COUPON WHO DOESNT LOVE BUTTERBALL?




Dill pickle, Philadelphia dip is the best thing ever. End of story. 


And lastly, my addiction to Hamburger Helper, ever since I was a kid at home I would look forward to the days my mother would make Hamburger Helper for supper. So, now, when hamburger is on sale* I get some and a couple of boxes of my favorite flavour and I enjoy it like I am a kid again. Mm. 


So that's a sneak peek into my weird food habits.

~ N

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Pro-fracking?

Here is a look at my final journalism story of my career, on hydraulic fracturing, a community taking a different stand towards the controversial process. 



A small Home-Hardware stands out on Main Street, in Blackville, New Brunswick. Piles of wood trucked from some foreign mill lay in the shadow of the former green, rusted, old abandoned mill that has sat unused for years. Between those two places is a large patch of grass, for the most part it is green, but parts of it have yellowed from the lack of settlement. A sign is standing tall, about 20 feet from Main Street, a white background and thick green letters: “SAY YES TO FRACKING.
“The huge sign above the Home Hardware was erected by a private citizen, on his own property, said Wendy Astle, Program Coordinator for A Family Place, Miramichi. “He is not on the Village Council or any committees in Blackville. He works out west and wants to be able to work here, in his hometown.”
In a province where sometimes violent protests against the exploration for shale gas and a controversial process called hydraulic fracking has come to a town situated on the banks of the world famous Miramichi River, population 990, is taking a different kind of path.  The town, whose livelihood depends entirely upon the natural resources available there, has all but disappeared in recent years.
            The village revolves around the local grocery store with a gas station and a store where the former mill workers gather for their morning coffee.  The Home Hardware that is just up the street from the Irving is where high school students get summer jobs loading trucks full of lumber. A statue of the Dungarvon Hooper, a story of a murder cook from a logging camp, who howls at night sending shivers through the spine of loggers who enter that area, stands tall at the edge of the beautiful municipal park.
            It is the kind of town that when you walk into the Pharamasave, people call you by your first name. The yellow buses file down from the top of the hill from the local school.
           From first glance the town is the picture of a healthy, vibrant, small town. However, the tiny village of Blackville lost its main source of employment, when the UPM, United Paper Ltd, a paper mill company from Finland, which still stands like a ghost closed in 2007. The mill closure meant 60 lost jobs.
            Other members of the community were employed at a much larger UPM mill in Miramichi, about a thirty minute drive from Blackville, which also closed, putting 600 people out of work.
            This meant hundreds of people were out of work. The mill closure came about THREE 3 months after the closure in Blackville. The community had been hit hard. Twice.
            Statistics Canada reported that the unemployment rate for the Cambellton-Miramichi area in April was 21.1 percent, up from 19.6 percent in April 2012. This region of New Brunswick is viewed by Statistics Canada as having the highest rate in unemployment.
            Hydraulic fracturing is the fracturing of a rock by a pressurized liquid. A mixture of water, sand and chemicals are injected into a wellbore at high pressure and gases like petroleum, uranium-bearing solution and brine water may migrate into the well.       
            Hydraulic fracturing is a process met with great resistance in nearly all parts of the globe. In 2011, France became the first nation to ban hydraulic fracturing.  Places like Prince Edward Island have brought forward the idea of a moratorium. Nova Scotia has made similar proposals in the past. The process has been blanketed in nothing but negative stories. Examples like the United States are hard to find. According the New York Times, the United States reported having success with the technique, and with a yield of 87 percent self-sufficient in gas.
On November 7, 2013, the Liberal leader, in his throne speech, called for a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing. CBC News quoted Brain Gallant, “Fracking is a contentious issue in our province, across North America and across the globe.” A moratorium would mean that Liberal government would start a suspension of the ongoing activity of hydraulic fracturing. According to CBC, energy minister Craig Leonard said that he expects the Liberals will allow shale gas exploration if they win the election. His party is calling for a moratorium for votes in the election.
Many of the environmental factors, such as the chemicals involved with extracting the gas, contamination of wells, have yet to be explored. There are many questions surrounding hydraulic fracturing. So why bring it to a small community like Blackville? 
            “We’re tired of poverty,” said Bonnie Fournier, local stay at home mom. “We’re tired of having to split up families to go away to Alberta to work. We’re tired of no jobs.”
          There will be no fracking done in Blackville, as there are no deposits found here, said Christopher Hennessey, council member and entrepreneur. However, a short drive of 15 to 20 minutes to areas such as Dungarvon and Cains will take you to gas rich areas, within the Blackville parish.”
           “Blackville is pro-fracking solely for economic reasons,” said Anthony Connors home-grown local. “They need the jobs and economic benefits fracking will bring.”
           In Blackville is all too common for people to move to provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan to find work.
        “Alberta is one of the provinces to which shale gas exploration is on-going,” Fournier said.“It was just a way of living, we had our own water well, which we drank from every day.”
            The community wishes to see a revival of their community. Despite the controversy surrounding the areas already involved with the process. It’s all about job creation and economics. 
            “There are very few answers to the unemployment crisis in our area,” said Hennessy. “We have no industry, no mills and no chance of future development,”
            “The big picture needs to be seen here, we need money we need revenue,” said Jake Stewart, Conservative MLA for the riding of Southwest-Miramichi.
            He predicts that within the years of 2018-2020 New Brunswick will hit a boom. Stewart thinks that the community needs jobs, and needs industry. “I want to make a difference,” said Stewart.
            “I am certain this is a good idea, because I have worked in the industry and worked on the wells the same as what would be found in areas of Dungarvon, Tower Road, and Kent County,” said Hennessey. “I know that the industry can be performed safely and have seen the benefits to small communities even smaller then Blackville.”
            The community has had three open information meetings that were neutral, based on facts and truths. There are supporters and non-supporters of Blackville’s possible economic revival.
            “I am one of those people who is still undecided on the fracking issue,” said Astle. “I would love to see the positive benefits that the government is promising us, but I am not convinced those are true. I think there has to be much more unbiased research into the process.”

            “I think that Blackville will survive no matter what they decide to do. We have been through economic downturns in the past and the spirit of people helping others in the community is still alive here”