Anakana Schofield

A most awful weather event is taking place in Ireland at this time.  Extraordinary flooding in Dublin & Wicklow. I am getting reports from friends and family and twitter as it happens. Roads closed. Just heard a guard was swept away in Wicklow and may have died. Evacuations etc in a place called Lwr Dargle in Wicklow. How distressing for people, especially the elderly.

The presidential debate is concurrently taking place on television. If that Fianna Fail related man is elected I think they’ll have to rename the country. Batshit nuts, as my friend Lynn would say.

Bunkhouse ballads

Robert Swanson (1905-1994) worked for years as a logger, then as a forestry safety inspector for the government. A special horn Swanson invented for trains was adapted for use all over the world, and he also pioneered the development of air brakes on logging trucks. 

Swanson I learned yesterday after the Vancouver 125 Legacy Books panel wrote ballads or bunkhouse ballads about logging. His story reminded me of the working class Northern English women factory poets.

I’m particularly intrigued by his train/railway connection and will hunt out his books.

 

Yesterday there was a night time Fog event. Tonight it is a nippy 7 degrees outside. It’s chilly round the knees. This is a temperature drop compared to other nights. It’s crisp and distinct.

Malarky

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Malarky, my novel, is now on Amazon sites (incl UK) for pre-order! I love the cover. She’s handsome.  Click on the image to add it to your bookshelves.

Bedlam — interesting, short film about the history of Riverview Mental Hospital. Note the figures and village comparison and the part where the hospital had its own postmark.

Chapters 29-37 in Ethel Wilson’s Swamp Angel.

It took me quite a long time to read a disagreement thread between Occupy Vancouver supporters on Facebook, so much so that by the time I had reached the end of it and darted to one of the links included in it (another epic ravel of back and forth and meander) I could no longer recall what the disagreement that had endless comments was exactly about. (Corporate toilets and the use of was one objector’s rant, the ethics of other supporters another, and on and on. Really they could have been fighting over the size of a raisin. )

I tried to read another list of demands but three paragraphs down my gaze had wandered.

Yesterday however it took me no time at all to comprehend how many mainly aboriginal women continue to be missing or have been murdered, as another male was charged with the murder of four women in or near Prince George.

It is not difficult for me to understand this question either:

“..“When will it stop? Who will stop these men preying on our women?” shouted Cee Jai Julian, a Carrier-Sekani woman originally from Fort St. James.

An emotional Julian, who collapsed in grief and was assisted by Mona Woodward of the Aboriginal Front Door Society, said she knew some of the allegedly murdered northern B.C. women.”

On Saturday at the protest I wondered why 4000 people do not turn out to the Missing Women’s memorial march each year?

Today I read the Occupy Vancouver protestors had joined the march for the missing women and the protest at the Missing Womens Inquiry that’s currently happening.

A global movement that is formed by satellite uprisings or groupings does not need to brand itself with identical slogans and actions. It needs to situate itself in the local and the immediate where it is. I am glad to see something of this emerging.

Late to the gate I may be, but I am on fire having caught up with the details of Theresa Treacy vs the ESB and eirGrid (however the hell you spell it).

I think Theresa should get the Nobel for standing up to these bullies. I am sick to the back teeth of women being bullied this way. (And believe me I have come up against bullies myself this year) To think she was languishing in a prison cell, while these madman duffers are barrelling across her land on Quads and pulping her trees to the ground.

Sweet effin’ Jesus.

On the upside, when I read about the courage and steadfast determination she displayed it reminds me there’s nothing like the determined Irish woman. I am delighted to be the offspring of one and the descendent of many more. My mother reported she’d her own words had with the ESB when they came onto her land and flattened all her grass. No better woman for the job!

It reminds me how much I miss such women in my daily life. I can hear the echos of them as I type and they make me smile. And you’ll be able to meet one in my forthcoming novel Malarky this spring.

One of the things I miss most about Dublin is the way people you know or are acquainted with respond to you when they meet you in the street.

Vancouver could learn something from Dublin in this regard.

It has no idea what it is missing.

I once met a man on Granville St who said I was the only person he’d spoken to the entire day. We were standing beside a kerbstone preacher at the time who was bellowing into a loud hailer while someone else of preacherly extraction was playing the guitar. Said male then started shouting very loudly at the Preacher that he was evil and compared him to the a number of leading and historical despots.

See? Incredible things happen when people have a chat….

“Still he stayed in the sunshine. The city was noisy and good-humoured . The people in the streets he decided had open minds… The people of his city were happy-go-lucky, unpretentious and often unambitious”

“Neil McKay loved his city for its adolescence, its precocity, its humanity, its cheek..”

 

Nine O’Clock Gun. A Novel of Vancouver. Roland Wild (first published 1952)

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