Things get nutty. I finished the 2009 beer blog photo contest last night only to get an email this morning about forgetting to award three prizes. Santa never forgets. We also had the 2009 Kingston St. Lawrence Vintage Base Ball winter meetings last night and basically confirmed there will be a 2010 season. Huzzah! Huzzah!!!
- No one was in charge. Which makes one wonder which party was undermining our military if that is at all what happened. I still think this is an entirely diplomatic corps to Ministerial level fiasco.
- Again this year, PEI ferry at risk.
- Buy the book called Hops and Glory if you can find a copy.
- The best that can be suggested it "Jays' future not entirely bleak"???
- Your great-great-great-great great-great-great-great great-great-great-great great-great-great-great great-great-great-great great-great-great-great-grannie knew what was good for you.
That is it. I wonder if I will post bullet points next Friday, spending time with the computer rather than the children. But it's like you are all my children... not like the soap opera... more in the stage play sense.

Comments
P of K - December 18, 2009 12:09 PM
Stupid me. I was under the impression that the PEI ferry was shut down round about the time they finished the bridge. What the hell was the bridge for anyways if the planned to keep running the ferry??? Perhaps a nod of support to the segment of the tourist trade that gets seasick?
And $5M a year subsidy for the ferry - WTF? That's a federal gift of about $40 per year for each islander or about $160 per year for the family of 4. Or from a job creation perspective - about $31,000 per year for each of those 160 ferry workers.
P of K - December 18, 2009 12:12 PM
And that's only for an 8 month per year operation.
Can PEI be classified as federal asset too?
Alan - December 18, 2009 2:26 PM
They don't like to consider themselves Canadian let alone a Federal territory.
Jay Currie - December 18, 2009 3:28 PM
Great grannies are always right...
P of K - December 18, 2009 3:39 PM
I was thinking maybe we could sell them to the Japanese.