Happy Easter!!

I hope you’re all having a wonderful day. I read the Easter story this morning before taking the cat to the vet (again), and then had the benefit of seeing the Easter story illustrated in Leggo at www.bricktestament.com check it out! It’s a fun site. It beats those Sunday School flannel graphs.

Catticus is doing fine. She’s eating and kissing and purring again, which is great. She’s still wearing a big funnel on her head so she won’t lick the stitches, but she’ll come up to me and try to lick my nose ~ and bonk me on the head with the funnel. She’s also pleased that the vet says she won’t have a scar. Thank goodness ~ I know she was worried about that one! (?!)

This afternoon we had an Easter potluck. It was supposed to be a barbeque but it rained. After we’d eaten, I brought out some white eggs (hard to find here, they’re mostly brown shells) and a dye kit that Mom sent last year. I’d hardboiled some eggs yesterday, but not enough, so we thought it would be fun to blow some too. I did the first one, since many of the others hadn’t done it before. After that, whoever wanted to try did. One of my friends asked me to put the holes in her egg for her, which I did. The others were doing well hollowing out their eggs, but she kept blowing and blowing and her face was turning red. Finally it dawned on her that I’d passed her a hardboiled egg! I hadn’t done it on purpose, but I wish I had! It made for a good laugh.

I read a headline this morning in the Canadian Press:

“Study finds link between problem gambling and abundance of VLTs”.

Really? I think we should now also commission some studies on the link between peanuts & peanut butter, computer use & Microsoft employees, and I think there may also be a connection between pollution and the abundance of pollutants in the air!!

In all fairness though, the study should do some good. Newfoundland and Labrador plan to reduce the number of VLT’s in the province. But it leads me to wonder why a study is needed to state the obvious before policy makers will consider it? Have the folks in charge lost all common sense?

In other news, I’m taking Catticus to the vet tomorrow to get her fixed. I’ve tried to tell her, but I think she’s hoping I’ll forget. Oh good grief…I’ve become one of those people who talk about their pets as though they’re people. Sorry. Let me rephrase: I’ve tried to tell her she’s going to the vet, but she no more understood that then anything else I’ve ever said to her.

Culinary Differences

I spent my Saturday morning with some friends at Costco. It’s a fair distance away from campus, but is well worth the outing 2-3 times a semester. After we finished our shopping, we headed for our ritual meal at the Costco food court. (It serves the only pizza in Korea that really tastes like pizza.) While we were eating, we noticed 2 different Koreans perform an interesting culinary exercise. I’ve seen it happen on all my other Costco fieldtrips as well. You know the onion dispensers they have (where you turn the handle and the onions grind out)? I have always assumed the onions were to be used as a condiment for a hotdog, or slice of cheese pizza. However, in Korea, it seems to be a common practice to grab a dinner plate, grind the onions onto the plate to make an onion mountain, then cover it in ketchup, mustard and tobasco sauce. The resulting onion platter is then consumed by the forkful as a side dish to accompany a pizza or chicken bake. Hmmm.

I apologize for any typing errors in this posting. I’ve got a cat sleeping on my left arm, and I’m useless at one-handed typing. Sorry.