Kyle Thomas

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Jan 01 2016

The Wood-Fire

I’m currently reading Walden: Life in the Woods by Henry David Thoreau and within it recites a portion of the following poem. I quite enjoyed it so I thought I would look it up and post it so I can refer back to it later.

 

Woodfire

The Wood-Fire

This bright wood-fire
So like to that which warmed and lit
My youthful days—how doth it flit
Back on the periods nigher,
Relighting and rewarming with its glow
The bright scenes of my youth—all gone out now.
How eagerly its flickering blaze doth catch
On every point now wrapped in time’s deep shade,
Into what wild grotesqueness by its flash
And fitful checquering is the picture made!
When I am glad or gay,
Let me walk forth into the brilliant sun,
And with congenial rays be shone upon;
When I am sad, or thought-bewitched would be,
Let me glide forth in moonlight’s mystery,
But never, while I live this changeful life,
This past and future with all wonders rife,
Never, bright flame, may be denied to me
Thy dear, life-imaging, close sympathy.
What but my hopes shot upward e’er so bright?
What but my fortunes sunk so low in night?
Why art thou banished from our hearth and hall,
Thou who art welcomed and beloved by all?
Was thy existence then too fanciful
For our life’s common light, who are so dull?
Did thy bright gleam mysterious converse hold
With our congenial souls? secrets too bold?
Well, we are safe and strong, for now we sit
Beside a hearth where no dim shadows flit,
Where nothing cheers nor saddens, but a fire
Warms feet and hands—nor does to more aspire;
By whose compact, utilitarian heap
The present may sit down and go to sleep,
Nor fear the ghosts who from the dim past walked,
And with us by the unequal light of the old wood-fire talked.

The Dial (October 1840) p. 193 – Poem by Ellen Sturgis Hooper

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal

Aug 22 2015

That time we went to Bite of Oregon

When we decided to go to Portland it just so happened that the food festival, Bite of Oregon, was happening at the same time.

I was very excited about this. I love food. Portland has good food. This was going to be good.

Right along the river, right across the street from our hotel, was the festival grounds. Fenced off on a grassy dirt area, 20-30 vendors were all set up selling bite-sized foods for goers to try.

Wanting all the food, we got tickets for the Chef’s table. Some of the top chef’s in Oregon has planned small dishes and of the 8 we could try five. It was fantastic. I have no idea anymore what I tried, but it was good.

The one problem with the festival though was during the day it was horribly hot. To the point of uncomfortable while trying to eat food. And to make matters worse there were few places to go that had shade. There were so many people.

I’m being picky, obviously, but it just wasn’t what I imagined. It felt, to me, like Folk on the Rocks, without the music. Granted the entry fee was only $6, so the barrier to entry was quite low, I for some reason thought it would be a bit more classy.

What I wish we had done more of was watching the demonstrations. They only had one stage and the demos were so spaced out over the three days, it would have been hard to seem more of them. And I wanted to see the rest of Portland. We did see a fun demonstration on Street Tacos. The demo, the banter, the teaching, was what I was looking for out of the festival, almost more so than the food.  Clearly I want to go to a food conference and not just a festival.

All in all, it was neat and I’m glad I experienced it. I did eat a lot of good food.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: bite of oregon, Food, Portland

Aug 17 2015

Blue Star Donuts – Portland, Oregon

On a Sunday morning, we got up and trekked up 12 streets to the downtown Portland location of Blue Star Donuts.
 
I’d heard a lot of about donuts in Portland. “Go to Voodoo Donuts” people would stay, but honest I wasn’t that into it. Donuts packed with as much crap as possible didn’t appeal to me. Blue Star Donuts on the other hand. They seemed to have some class to them.
Blue Star Donuts
 
We arrived at Blue Star about 20 minutes before they opened, 8 am, to find only two people in line ahead of us. So we waited and as the time grew nearer the line grew longer. By opening the line must have been 30 people long, on a Sunday morning.
 
We decided to try six. I won’t review them all – go try them for yourself – but I will say that we can 6 to try, not to eat in one sitting. They were as follows:
  • Blue Berry Bourbon Basil
  • Raspberry Buttermilk
  • Hard Apple Cider Fritter
  • Lemon and Key Lime
  • Death by Real Chocolate with Crunch (Not the real name but that’s what I’m calling it)
  • Maple Bacon
They all tasted real if that is a way to describe a donut. They didn’t just taste like sugar, they tasted like real ingredients, which goes a long way.
 
The neatest part for me, though, was actually seeing them prep, bake, fill and display the donuts. It was quite the production, in a relatively small space.
 
If you go to Portland, try the Blue Star donuts. It is less of a line than Voodoo, but they do still sell out.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: Blue Star Donuts, Portland

Aug 10 2015

Portland Farmers Market: What I Saw

I love Farmers Markets. I’ve gone to them since I was a little kid. They bring me so much joy nowadays. Seeing all the fresh food and products that have been grown, harvested and made by local people. It puts a smile on my face that I can’t get rid of. No, seriously, it happened.

_DSF7427

While visiting Portland, Oregon, we went to the Portland Famers Market. It is Portlands longest running Farmers Market and is located in a square at the Portland State Univesity in downtown Portland. There are other markets around town run by the same organization, but this one seemed to be the biggest.

There were so many different products that my head was spinning, but most of all it felt like a communal place. People were meeting up with friends and family. Rushing to their favourite vendors, all while having a good time. Not unlike the Yellowknife Farmers Market.

The primary vendors were the ones selling products a customer could take home. The produce, fruits, milled flour, cured meats, baked bread and pastries. The market also had a select few ready-made food vendors selling food of different cuisines. And at one end a band played. Although there seemed to be buskers throughout the market.

I would shop here all the time. I wouldn’t leave.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: Farmers Market, Food, Portland

Aug 06 2015

The Powerful Little Camera that is Perfect for Me

I don’t travel enough to have a system in place for what gear to bring. Instead, about an hour before my flight, I go into a panic about what camera and associated gear I should bring with me on said travels.

fuji-x100s

Last February I went to Las Vegas for the first time. I took a Fuji X100s mirror-less camera with me that has a prime 35mm lens. I also took my Nikon D600 with a 24-70mm Lens. Both cameras are great, however, I only used the Fuji. It was simply lighter and easy to carry around, whether walking the Vegas strip or hiking in the desert. I didn’t use the big DSLR at all.

Next trip, a conference in Toronto, Ontario and a visit with family. For this trip I opted for only the Fuji. I wasn’t primarily going for a holiday and didn’t suspect I would be doing much sightseeing. It works perfectly.

The dilemma with this trip I’m on, that will have me going from Victoria, BC to Portland, OR and then back again along the west coast, is that I don’t know what I will encounter.

Food Festival and street events in Portland, the Fuji would do fine. Driving up the coast and hiking in Washington’s parks, I’m not so sure of.

The deciding factor that finally made me decided to only bring the Fuji X100s was a simple question to myself: what will I be using the photos for.

The answer, nothing but blogging, Facebooking and Instagraming. I’m not a photographer who is going after photos to sell or to get into a big magazine. I’m a casual photographer who likes to document the experiences that I have and then share them through some of these mediums.

The Fuji works perfectly for this.

And at the end of the day the Fuji does shoot some amazing RAW images that could be used in print if I ever wanted to explore that route.

Expect more from me on the topic if Portland and travels through the area.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: camera, fuji, Nikon, Portland

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