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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Here are some suggestions with a kids lens:

    Vancouver Island

    • get mid Island then over to the west coast

    • Parksville - large sandy beaches to dig in

    • ferry to Denman Island and then to Hornsby Island - fossils! https://hornbynaturalhistory.com/category/fossils/

    • Qualicum Beach - gravelly and lots of seniors, but a great place to see bald eagles picking up clams and oysters, dropping them to break them open and diving to eat.

    • Cathedral grove on Hwy to Port Alberni, accessible old growth forest

    • Alberni - old forestry interpretation site with a logging train in the Cherry Creek area

    • Drive to Tofino - an adventure in itself

    • Long Beach

    • whale watching

    If you go to Vancouver, many of the classic stops are worth it

    • the Aquarium
    • Whale watching
    • Grouse mountain gondola and mountain top
    • Capilano suspension bridge and the fish hatchery and environs
    • Seabus
    • UBC museum of anthropology





  • I do know about the latter. Knew some folks that taught there.

    Few courses are taught by tenured faculty at the Ivies. Junior faculty have to justify final grades, PhD students and sessional have to justify any grades lower than B- on any assignment.

    Coupling that with the ‘legacy admissions’ where children of alumni have a lower bar to admission, anyone with a B- average has a questionable degree.

    No matter how good their programs are, for the lowers tier of students, they’re just institutions of transmitted privilege. Which is why the complaints about DEI mechanisms to balance that are so suspect.

    I wasn’t aware whether UPenn was on the same system but it’s a huge thing for private universities reliant on tuition fees and big alumni donations.

    It’s interesting how California is shutting down the practice of legacy admissions, and Stanford and USC are feeling the sting.








  • Could this have something to do with many of southern Alberta’s pioneer settlers having come from the United States after failing as settlers in Nebraska, Utah and other states in the land rush?

    From the Canadian Encyclopedia

    Migration

    The most extensive single wave of Americans came to Canada between 1895 and 1915, after the railways were well established in the West and good, inexpensive land had diminished in the US. American farmers poured into Canada, making up nearly as many western settlers as those from the British Isles, who were less likely to farm. Some of the effects of this migration are still to be seen in the relatively high US-born presence in Alberta and Saskatchewan, in the proportion of farmers among the US-born, and more arguably, in political attitudes in these provinces quite different from the remainder of Canada.

    https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/americans