<font color='black' size='2' face='arial'><font size="2">Looks like I will be writing a daily (Monday-Friday) till the end of the month. You will get a posting with the usual caveat: curious, you are welcome; not, meet you at the bend.</font>
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<div><font size="2">Jaime</font></div>
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<div><font size="2">P.S. The Edmonton House. It is a tall building that looms above the Holiday Inn Express where the Red Arrow bus picks up passengers. T'is less than ten blocks from the old EI Edmonton House. Did not bother to go by the old house.<br>
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<div class="MsoNormal"><b>Edmonton</b></div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">I worked through my last two years of College as a disc
jockey and a commentator in a local radio station in the Cagayan Valley up
northern Luzon. One of my English
teachers thought that I could improve my English if I used it more often, so
she had me introduce songs on the airwaves as well as read dedication wishes.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Before I knew it, I was doing a social commentary in Iloko
like a seasoned politico, dispensing advice to the forlorn and the
love-distraught pretending to be an experienced Don Juan or seasoned lover boy
Romeo, if not a tested gigolo/lothario massaging egos while reading flowery
dedications. I found out early also that
I was not in the air for the quality of my broadcast voice for I sounded like
an old man, thus, my early morning commentary in <i>Ti Ayat ken biag ni Tang Jaime </i>(the love and life of old Jaime); but
my teacher allegedly saw wit in my gab. </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">At noontime, when our VOA-voiced announcer was absent to
read the daily news, I reluctantly subbed.
My voice cracked more than it gelled.
Our announcer Mang Kiko with the deep throat (before the phrase meant
something else) turns out to have a niece who lives in Edmonton, Alberta. The connection, albeit thin, occasioned the
trip from the Calgary Stampede where I wore a black cowboy hat, a plaid shirt
and a bolo tie, to a visit Mang Kiko's relation in the festival town of
Edmonton!</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">I had been to Edmonton before, on the second half of the 70s
when my family and I resided in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. My second daughter was born in Canada. I was to drive my Calgary host's car but I
forgot my Hawai'i driver's license in China, and rules will not allow for
facsimile even if a copy is available from the Internet. So we took a Red Arrow bus, instead.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">I arrived in Calgary before Canada Day on the First of July. I learned that the city was voted in one
tally as the cleanest in the world. Even
though the Province has abundant tar sands that the oil industry wishes to process
for electric power, Calgary and Edmonton are cities with clear skies and ample
fresh air. The healthy ambience comes,
however, at a steep sticker price. Both
are on the top ten of the most expensive cities in the world.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Edmonton sits at the junction of the prairie that rolls
south all the way to the Mississippi river and heads north to boreal hills full
of aspen, poplar, birch and Manitoba maple trees. Railroad development first came through with the
Canadian Pacific line from Vancouver to Calgary, so the second city of the
Province is ahead on the population count.
The Provincial government supported other lines that could compete with
the federally supported Pacific line that traversed the nation close to the
48th parallel, and the Canadian Northern line developed routes connecting
Toronto to Prince Rupert in BC of the northwest Pacific coast, and Churchill up
north. Edmonton became a gateway city.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">The City leads to the oil sands of the north, and the
diamond mines of the NW Territories. It is
also the highway gate to Alaska via the Yukon.
Though at a more northern latitude than Regina in Saskatchewan and Winnipeg
in Manitoba, it has milder winters than both.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">The Red Arrow bus came equipped with a fridge full of pop
soda and water, with clean washroom and comfortable seats provided with
three-pronged electrical outlets for the laptop, USB power sources for tablet
and cellphone, a socket for the earphone, and volume and TV channel controls. </div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">Halfway into the trip, we were welcomed by the familiar green
farm equipment of John Deere in Red Deer.
The red deer that named the town is often mistaken as an elk, a wapiti, and
a moose, but with bison on the horizon, I was reminded of a recent trip to
Erg'una near Hailar in Inner Mongolia to an old elk-tending tribal group known
to be part of the tribes that crossed the Bering Straits into the continent,
later carried Amerigo Vespucci's name, some now identified with members of the First
nation of Canada.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">I napped a bit and awakened in a populated settlement so I
asked my seatmate where we were. I was
told that we were in L.A., which made me wonder if I was asleep in a surrealistic
dream until I saw a sign that said: Le Duc, Alberta. We were in L.A. of the French trappers.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">In the farmland, the 3500 Duramax 4x4 GMC was the chariot of
choice of the farm warrior of boots and hat. Edmonton loomed not too far alongside what I previously
saw were but trickles of the Saskatchewan River in the Athabasca glacier in the
Rockies, now a wide and deep cut in the middle of the city; the English Edmonton
of 1977 has become a glitter of metropolitan polish in the midland of Alberta.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">My welcome was very warm.
Our host was a retired pediatrician who spent sometime in Zambia with
her miner hubby. Sprite as a Doris Day,
we knew people in common. Meeting other
Pilipino elders at the local Legion center introduced me to other folks who
knew or were related to other people I also knew. Attending a baptismal gathering got us
multilingual Pinoys; the diaspora suddenly was kin.</div>
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<div class="MsoNormal">It did not take long for Edmonton in my heart to cry out: Yah
hoo!</div>
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<div style="clear:both"><i>j'aime la vie</i><br>
<a href="mailto:pinoypanda2031@aol.com">pinoypanda2031@aol.com</a><br>
<div><i>yesterday, appreciate; tomorrow, anticipate; today. participate. In all, celebrate!</i></div>
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