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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by CanadaJimmy
(Post 13169300)
Most items are comparable, and groceries are actually more expensive in the US and the food is often worse quality. Clothes are the exception, as well as specialist things that are hard to get - they usually cheaper, and the other main benefit is more selection in the US. But certainly not almost everything is cheaper.
Originally Posted by DMajor
(Post 13169376)
Some good answers. I don't really do much 'Canadian' stuff. Not a big fan of skiing, don't watch ice hockey, never go in Tim Hortons (rubbish coffee and bland food) although I have found myself saying 'eh' a few times.
Agree about the skiing, hockey, Tim Hortons and other purveyors of over processed garbage made edible by health-damaging processes and overloads of sugar and other additives. Growing up in New Brunswick in the '50s I even incurred the wrath of my stepdad by refusing to watch Saturday night hockey - my argument even at that young age was "everybody in school talks about the hockey results on Monday anyway, so I don't have to watch it!" which alas, got me no plus-points at home. Yet as an ex-Canuck I dutifully cling to my cherished druthers. To this day I would never ever again drink Moosehead Pale Ale, which most likely disqualifies me as an expat New Brunswicker. In the '90s a brewery in Tasmania briefly made it as a boutique drink but the locals scathingly referred to it as "moose piss" and nobody ever bought more than one small bottle of it. The brewery eventually closed and was bought out by one of the larger bar makers who wisely discontinued the brand. I still have one bottle of it in our home bar as a token memory, but after 20+ years it's likely vinegar now, or worse. I hold a fond place in my heart for Cherry blossom chocolate bars which I believe are or were made in Canada by Lowney's). Haven't had one in years but hm, the memories. So yes, some Small Pleasures From Hom matter. |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by jerry brewer
(Post 13169234)
cheets J cheers J ​​​​​​ |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by jerry brewer
(Post 13169492)
seems i can' edit my typo to ....
cheers J ​​​​​​ |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by jerry brewer
(Post 13169234)
Hi
been here 17yrs, still dont feel canadian was in a pub the other day and asked if i was on vacation here i think i will be devonian until the end cheets J Would you ever move back to Devon? You must miss the Cider and cream teas...lol |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by DMajor
(Post 13169617)
Would you ever move back to Devon?
You must miss the Cider and cream teas...lol Hi I must admitt sometimes i look back at south devon life , but i think it is with rose tinted glasses, as when i check the local papers i see mainly doom and gloom, and crime, and shops closing down but to be fair i think there is a bit of that here in bc as well i think now the most i would do is 'snowbird' to south devon for a few months over winter, as it is milder there I can get cider here, not scrumpy, and i can get clotted cream in small glass jars, but it is different one thing i miss is dartmoor, a safe wildlife area to walk on, you dont need bear spray there and being able to get an ivor's https://ivordewdney.co.uk/ and maybe lidls cheers jerry |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Been here 22 years- feel like I am somewhere over the middle of the pond- by that I mean I feel not quite British but not Canadian either. We have quite a few Canadian friends but the bond isn't there like we had with our UK friends and that we still have with our UK friends.
I felt very Canadian when the people of this great land got together and drove from all parts to Ottawa to remind Trudeau that we would not live under mandates any more (especially when everywhere else was opening up and not us)- and the reason I felt the pride was because we all came together as one nation at that time- set aside the other "white noise". |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by shelley748
(Post 13169636)
I felt very Canadian when the people of this great land got together and drove from all parts to Ottawa to remind Trudeau that we would not live under mandates any more (especially when everywhere else was opening up and not us)- and the reason I felt the pride was because we all came together as one nation at that time- set aside the other "white noise". Are you talking about the truck parade? The event sponsored by the Russians? I threw eggs at those people. I stood on the pavement and made wanker signs at them. Many others did. We could do that, as a crowd, because we were all fully vaccinated. |
Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by shelley748
(Post 13169636)
.... I felt very Canadian when the people of this great land got together and drove from all parts to Ottawa to remind Trudeau that we would not live under mandates .... we all came together as one nation at that time .....
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 13169659)
I knew that the population of Canada isn't huge, but I had still imagined that there were more than 2,000 of you. :unsure:
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by shelley748
(Post 13169671)
Did you not see the videos of crowds on the over passes in 2022 and alongside the highways in minus 30C temps? There were way more than 2000 and in Ottawa itself over the period I would say over 500,000- which is a big deal.
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by shelley748
(Post 13169671)
Did you not see the videos of crowds on the over passes in 2022 and alongside the highways in minus 30C temps? There were way more than 2000 and in Ottawa itself over the period I would say over 500,000- which is a big deal.
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
My impression of the truckers was just a bunch of people who never liked Trudeau or the Liberals from day 1 looking for an excuse to whine and moan about it. Additionally, much like Jan 6th in the US and Brexit, many of the participants were likely riled up and escalated their behavior due to Facebook acting as an echo chamber for them, with pages like "Canada Proud" and all this nonsense. It certainly didn't make me feel Canadian but rather sad to see Canada another victim of this kind of social media-fueled political division which is a global problem.
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by CanadaJimmy
(Post 13169737)
My impression of the truckers was just a bunch of people who never liked Trudeau or the Liberals from day 1 looking for an excuse to whine and moan about it. Additionally, much like Jan 6th in the US and Brexit, many of the participants were likely riled up and escalated their behavior due to Facebook acting as an echo chamber for them, with pages like "Canada Proud" and all this nonsense. It certainly didn't make me feel Canadian but rather sad to see Canada another victim of this kind of social media-fueled political division which is a global problem.
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
whatever- you are entitled to your opinion I am to mine- enjoy your day
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Re: How long to feel Canadian?
Originally Posted by CanadaJimmy
(Post 13169737)
My impression of the truckers was just a bunch of people who never liked Trudeau or the Liberals from day 1 looking for an excuse to whine and moan about it. Additionally, much like Jan 6th in the US and Brexit, many of the participants were likely riled up and escalated their behavior due to Facebook acting as an echo chamber ...
Originally Posted by dbd33
(Post 13169856)
Yes, quite!
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