Kyle Thomas

The Website of Kyle Thomas (KyleWith)

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Jun 14 2011

Pictures on the Wall make my Home

I have been living in Fort St John over 8 months now and ever since moving I have been in a bit of a limbo. I am currently in my 3rd apartment, I know, bit much for only 8 months but that is the way it is. I never was able to settle into a place and make it my own.

I am now in my own apartment, it isn’t the most glamours place, but it is mine. I have slowly started furnishing it. Recently I bought a kitchen table and chair and a toaster. All I really need now is a couch to go with my chair.

Family Photos

It has actually been tough for me living in limbo. I’m a homebody, I love my home, I need a home. I like having a place I can retreat to when I need to. A place that is mine, that I can control.

Photos make a home more comforting to me, so over the weekend I printed off some photos. The photos if you hadn’t of guessed are of people. Oh and those people happen to be family.

Family Photos

Looking around my living room and see these photos, along with a bunch of other ones I put up, makes me feel like I’m in a real home again.

What makes your home, home for you?

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal · Tagged: family, home, photos

Jun 13 2011

The Joy in Starting a Blog and Tips

It is great to see people starting blogs, so here are a couple tips to thing about

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Journal · Tagged: blog, help, new, tips, Wordpress

Jun 10 2011

Riding to Social Media Camp in Style with LA Limos

When I registered for the Social Media Camp Victoria Networking I didn’t think I was going to get to ride a limo to the event. Then of course I was one of the four to win a ride to and from the event. LA Limos was a sponsor of the event dinner and what fun it was.

I thought our time with LA Limo’s was great. Neil, our driver, picked us up on time and was happy to see us. He was organized and had everyones name and numbers ready to go incase we couldn’t find them. When we had to kill some time while waiting for another guest he took us on a tour of the harbour, where he graciously took a photo of us all.

Before he dropped us off for the event, he made sure we all had his contact information in case we needed to change the pick up time. Ironically while at the Networking Dinner, I ended up sitting next to the owners of LA Limos. Both were great people and a pleasure to talk too.

Below is a video created by Aaron Hall, another limo ride winner, of our trip in the Limo to the dinner.

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: dinner, LA Limo, smcv11, smcv11roadtrip

Jun 10 2011

Treeline Lodge the Lodge itself (Part 1)

This is another post on Treeline Lodge, the lodge I spent a few summers at as a teenager. You can read my introduction to the lodge here, but basically it is a Tourism/Outpost Camp 150 miles north of Yellowknife, NT in the Arctic Tundra.

I’m going to try to describe the actual lodge in this post. I attempted to get an image from Google Maps, but do to it location, in the middle of nowhere, the quality stinks. I’ll start with everything that was within the “bear fence”, which was basically an electric wired fence that was meant to slow a bear down enough it can be dealt with.

First was the kitchen building, which was a long rectangle building. One entrance at the front of the building and another at the back for the cook and staff. As you walked in there were 4 large picnic styled tables with benches around them for camp residents to eat meals. About mid way down the building you would approach a built-in serving countertop, where residents would get their meals. As you went into the kitchen you would find an industrial sized grill and oven – I mean some means eggs on that grill. On the other side was an industrial sized sink, with countertop scattered throughout. There was also a large island table in the middle of the kitchen. As you passed through the kitchen you would walk into the pantry, with a big built-in, walk-in fridge on you right and freezers on the left.

Running parallel off the right side of the kitchen building were two building for sleeping quarters. Each building had 12 rooms with two beds in each room and a hallway running down the middle. They were very basic rooms, each bed with closet and bedside table.

Attached to the lodging building closest to the bear fence was a hallway that lead to a few different places. The first was the fully functioning bathrooms and laundry room. Each bathroom (Men/Women) was fitted with actual toilets, sinks with running water and showers. If you made a left turn while going down the hallway you would pass a very small room which housed two very large water tanks. These tanks – which I had to fill from the lake on a daily basis – were for drinking and washing water. Water was pumped from a clean lake and then filtered to the max and then pumped into the hot water tank or throughout the buildings. Continuing down the hallway would get you to the final room. This room was the rec room. There was a small library, a few table games and SATELLITE TV. The TV was a big deal, guys would come in from the field and this is where they would ended up after supper. The other reason that made this room unique was it 25ft (I don’t actually know) ceiling. I never did know why it was so high. At one point I thought it was because someone might have wanted to build a second floor, but I never found out.

As I have become long winded about the Lodge, I’ll break this into two posts.

Treeline Lodge, NWT

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Memories · Tagged: lodge, NWT, tourism, treeline

Jun 07 2011

Back to Mainland with BC Ferries

This time on BC Ferries was not as eventful as the first time, and the first time wasn’t even that eventful. Upon waiting in the ship yard for a good hour to board the ferry we ended up parking at the back of the boat, which was fine, it didn’t make a different.

As we were on our way up the levels with the hords of people we saw that “hidden” buffet. It was not really hidden, but not a lot of other people were heading that way, so we did. The Buffet runs all day and is about $24.00 a person at the very back of the boat. We reluctantly paid to get in and where happy with what we saw.

A nice setting as a restaurant with windows all around the back of the boat, so were could see everything and a buffet worth eating – I’m going to have another post of the buffet shortly. We thought this was great, we could eat supper and then sit in comfortable chairs at a table and use our computers. We ended up sitting there the whole time and then just walking quickly back to our vehicle when the time came.

The buffet room was only half full of people, at supper time. I’m assuming that the majority of people don’t want to spend the extra money after paying to get on the boat or go back and forth so often it does’t appeal to them anymore.

Riding with BC Ferries

[flickr-gallery mode=”tag” tags=”bcferries2″ tag_mode=”all”]

Written by kylewith · Categorized: Travels · Tagged: bc ferries, ocean, smcv11, smcv11roadtrip, Vancouver, victoria

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