Good Wishes for a trifecta

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Today is Mardi Gras or Shrove Tuesday, Chinese New Year and the start of the Monty of Ramadan.

The year of the horse usually brings a symbol of forward movement, independence, and endurance. It comes only once every 60 years. A thought for all people in the world who seek such, the Ukrainians, the Palestinians, and others.

Mardi Gras is the old Christian month of fasting and reflection. Tomorrow is Ash Wednesday, a day at the beginning of Lent, reminding us of the brevity of life, that we are dust. It also marks the traditional end to Carnival Season.

Ramadan is also a month of light, fasting and prayer, of good wishes, of peace and goodwill. People wish each other a Ramadan Kareem and Mubarak ( generous and blessed).

Tonight as a tradition we will have a dish of meat and pancakes to mark Shrove Tuesday.

Mid-February

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This is a long weekend in PEI, today the 15 February is the Anniversary of the Canadian Flag, proclaimed in 1965, 61 years ago.

Yesterday was the solidarity march around the world for the people of Iran and the crowds were enormous. Toronto had the largest amount of people participating in a march in its history, some 350,000 persons with flags of the Empire of Iran and Canada. In Munich some 200,000 people came and listened to HIH Prince Reza Pahlavi, whose name you hear chanted by crowds and the words Javid Shah (Long live the King). The demonstrations continue all over Iran and it appears that the 47 year old regime of the Mullah is in danger, so far more than 30,000 people have been killed in the streets. It is not the first time the religious mullahs ruled Iran (Persia) this happened in the past, the late period of the Safavid Dynasty 1666 to 1722 saw the Mullahs dominating and imposing their rule. Eventually the Shah regained the upper hand. But the religious aspect of Shia Islam continued to be present in society, until the arrival of the Pahlavi Dynasty in 1921 coup, deposing the Qajar Dynasty. If Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi regains power with the help of the USA, it will be the second time this has happened, his father Shah Mohamed Reza return to power in 1953. What is interesting is the role of France in all of this, they had given asylum to Ayatollah Khomeini in the 1970’s in a small village Neauphle-le-Château. The French President at the time thought he would get lucrative oil contracts if Khomeini came to power. He flew him on a special Air France plane in 1979 to Tehran. I would not be surprised if the Trump administration forced a regime change, the regime in Iran has a heavy past of confrontations against the USA.

Some 10 years ago we came to Charlottetown in February during what is called Islander Day. This visit would see us move to PEI on May 1, 2016. A lot has happened since and we are well established here now. Currently a Cocktail Festival is taking place with 19 bars and restaurants presenting their version of a cocktail and the public gets to vote on the one they like most. The Wine Festival is coming up in April again an event not to be missed. After that the tourism season will start as well as the Lobster Spring Fishing Season. If you want a job on a Lobster boat now is the time to apply, it is a dangerous job and you need sea legs and enjoy getting up at 3am.

Because Ramadan starts Tuesday, I have been getting a lot of sites with Persian or Arabic food, I have made note of easy recipes most involving Basmati rice and spices and lamb or beef. Small zucchini and Eggplant, tomatoes, spices like turmeric are common. The recipes are labour intensive but the results are also impressive. Not to forget Medjool dates which are very sweet and imported from various Arab countries, easily available in grocery stores.

Because I served in Egypt, I remember the lamps and coloured lights during the Holy Month. The word “Fanous” or “Fanoos” in Egyptian dialects is a term originating from Greek. It means lantern, lamp, or light. It was historically used with the meaning of “the light of the world,” and is a symbol of hope as in “light in the darkness”. The other symbol the Crescent Moon and Star often paired with lanterns, these symbolize the beginning of the fasting month and are frequently used in greetings and decorations. Star and crescent has been used since ancient times and has been found amongst many different peoples; it isn’t exclusive to Islam and its origin isn’t Islamic. It was adopted as a symbol of the Ottoman empire, which governed the Muslim world for hundreds of years. And it is from there that the symbol of this empire became connected in people’s imaginations to the religion of Islam as a whole. But she stresses that the Quran does not mention this symbol and neither does the Hadith literature. Early Muslims did not use the star and crescent to represent Islam.




Shopping, sales and Ramadan

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At this time of the year in Italy there is a lot of sales on clothing and shoes, this is a good time to renew your wardrobe and see the new Spring fashion. Lots of stores in Italy advertise on Instagram. If you travel to Italy now you would be able to get some real bargains in high quality garments. Men’s fashion offer a lot of quality choices unseen here in North America. Dressing stylishly is a big thing for Italian men, who could be compared to peacocks. I wish I could go and shop. A favourite Brioni in Rome and E. Marinella of Naples, not to forget Milan.

Also this month lots of recipes and cooking shows on various dishes in preparation for Ramadan and the Iftar meals taken at Sunset. Ramadan starts at sunset on 17 February and ends in March. My memories of Ramadan while I served in the Middle East but it is better to say West Asia, less colonialist, was how good the food was, not to mention the dessert many of them made with honey and almonds. The Ramadan month I discovered was very different from what I had heard of in school in Canada. In Egypt, it was a period of festival of Faith but also of lights and happiness, goodwill and peace. Young girls would make necklaces of Lilly of the Valley, the poor would be invited to meals of roasted lamb. There was prayers of course but the atmosphere was joyous. The month of Ramadan created an atmosphere that was special, unlike was we see at Christmas, not centred on gifts and kids but on everyone. On Instagram you can watch chef’s preparing food at home, such dishes are eaten during the year but more so during Ramadan and eaten at home not in restaurants with family and friends. On Instagram or YouTube, Husenfayad has great recipes, Eniisdkyr, Hammoud.og in Lebanon.

Mansaf, national dish from Jordan, lamb shoulder in ghee butter with saffron rice and almonds, pine nuts.

So 2026 both the Asian or Chinese New Year, Year of the Horse and Ramadan coincide. The shops here have lots of offers for Asian clients to cook dishes. To think just 10 years ago here in PEI, none of this existed, shows how much we have changed in terms of population becoming diversified.

News of the day

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Nothing surprises me anymore about what is happening around the world. Today King Charles III declared that he was quite willing to help the police in the UK on any investigation on his brother Andrew. Then Prince William and his wife Princess Catherine denounced Andrew and again said they are the victims. These declaration from the King and the Heir are unheard of, this is quite astonishing, usually silence would be the route to follow. However the situation has taken a dramatic turn with the discovery that Andrew appears to have sent sensitive confidential information belonging to the UK Government to Epstein. That is a very serious matter and the King now must protect the Crown and his brother could easily face jail if convicted. It may also bring down the UK Government of PM Keir Starmer in the Peter Mandelson affair, a friend of Epstein. Strange how in the USA, the involvement of Trump with Epstein does not appear to have any consequences for the Teflon President.

The $6.2 Billion new Gordie Howe Bridge over the river between Canada and Michigan is being delayed by President Trump. A bridge built entirely with Canadian Taxpayers money on both side of the river, now Trump wants ownership otherwise he will block indefinitely the opening. Again threatening the business-economic relation between USA and Canada. That is $186 Million daily, yes daily in trade between Michigan and Canada alone. There is a strong belief that the Moroun Family who privately own the old Ambassador bridge built in 1927 brings in about $300 million in toll fees daily to the family. However industries, businesses and new urban plan for Windsor, Ontario long ago decided that a new bridge directly connected to the 401 HWY was the best bet. Like all previous threats and tantrum by Trump this one will probably pass and be forgotten.

In anticipation of …

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The days are getting longer now the sun sets at 5:30pm and the weather has been so so. I am looking up when we change time as we spring forward by 1 hour, on Sunday 8 March, a month from now. It makes a big difference when clocks move forward, Spring can’t be far.

This weekend many Carnavals are starting, the 72nd edition of the Quebec Winter Carnaval opened with all the usual attractions and events. The Ice Castle in front of the National Assembly Bldg. the castle stands 11 metres tall and each ice block weight 35 lbs. engineers are involved in the building project. Some of the events and one of the oldest is the canoe race across the ice covered St-Lawrence river between Quebec City and Levis. A lot of push and pull to get to the other side as fast as possible. Another event is the ice climbing of the Momontrency Falls which gushes water at a height of 272 feet. It is a very cold pastime but many love doing it. To keep warm the tradition is to drink Caribou, a mix of red wine or port and whisky, it does have quite a punch, but it warms you up. People cary the drink inside long walking sticks. Bonhomme Carnaval is the mascot host of the festivities which last 2 weeks with daily events running late at night. Everyone loves a hug from Bonhomme even Prime Minister Mark Carney, here at the Citadel de Quebec, Summer Residence of the Governor General of Canada.

The Momontrency Falls beautiful in Winter like Summer.

The ice canoe race dates back to 1608 when this was the only way to cross the river in Winter.

First week of Fevrier

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I love listening to the voice of Dietrich Fisher -Dieskau and at the moment I am listening to Zueignung by composer Richard Strauss. Zueignung (devotion) is a renowned German Lied composed by Richard Strauss in 1885, setting a poem by Hermann von Gilm zu Rosenegg. It serves as the opening song of Strauss’s first collection of songs, written when he was only 21 years old. Fisher-Dieskau was a bass-baritone, died in 2012, he was the famous Lieder singer of the post-war era.

This weekend we have a dinner at the Club on Friday, Greek cuisine is featured and on Sunday friends are coming for lunch at 1:30pm. This week was soup making, Will made an excellent Italian stuff pepper soup, I made a French-Canadian pea soup following a traditional recipe. I must have reviewed a dozen recipes until I found the one that sounded the most like what I remembered of my mother’s recipe. I bought a ham hock and green split peas, adding chicken stock, chopped celery, carrots, one sweet onion, cloves of garlic cooked it all for 2 hours at the end I added a cup of chopped smoked ham. It was very good.

The weather is cloudy, cold and humid around minus 14 C. So please do not complain to me because it is plus 12 C where you live.

While at the gym in our building, I was watching a mini house building show, such houses are about 400 sq feet of less, prefabricated. It is perfect for one person if you use such space as a cottage in the countryside. However in this TV program they were trying to convince us that it is perfect for 2 adults and 2 small children who are moving from a 2000 sq feet home. Ok the fun of it all will fade after a week. The other model was for a family of 4 adults, mom, dad and 2 grown kids who previously lived in a 2800 sq foot home. The son says, ”well it will take some getting used to”, no kidding, if you do not murder each other before hand. Such shows are so silly, how can anyone take them seriously. The single bathroom is the size of toilet on a plane with a shower. It gave me a good laugh.

This week I wish I was in Paris to see the exhibit of 92 woven carpets and tapisseries measuring 9 metres wide and covering 4000 sq metres, made on order for King Louis XIV around 1668, connecting the Louvre to the Tuileries Palace via la Grande Galerie. The exhibit is at the Grand Palais in Paris. Since the King moved to live permanently at Versailles, they were never installed and remained in storage. These beautiful carpets have not been seen since 1793. They were sold at the Revolution (civil war). It took quite a lot of work to trace them for this special exhibit.

Allan Stratton: It’s time to consider the worst-case American scenarios

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Every democratic implosion under Trump is a fantasy future until it becomes a tragic past

Allan Stratton is a Canadian playwright and novelist.

LINE EDITOR

JAN 30, 2026

“I have the impression that the persons directing the policy of the Hitler Government are not normal. Many of us, indeed, have a feeling that we are living in a country where fantastic hooligans and eccentrics have got the upper hand.” —Sir Horace Rumbold to London, 1933

It took six years from Hitler’s ascension to power at the beginning of 1933 to Kristallnacht. Those first years saw the vilification of minorities, censorship, the building of deportation camps, the mass expulsion of foreigners, and the need for Jews to show their papers on demand. Most Jews, left-wing activists, and other so-called undesirables stayed put: Germany had been their home for generations. They had friends and neighbours. They thought the unpleasantness would pass. In the end, the question wasn’t whether to go, but to where they might escape.

Today in America, the vilification of minorities is rampant from the Oval Office on down. Citizens are kidnapped, disappeared, and even murdered in the street by masked agents of the state. Detainees are held in subhuman conditions; over a thousand have vanished from the online databanks of a single deportation centre. Constitutional and civil rights protections are violated and institutional oversight is gutted. Brown Americans need to carry their citizenship papers to avoid arrest and detention; legal immigrants with proper papers are deported. The administration extorts media, corporations, universities, and law firms. The legislative branch is neutered. The Supreme Court permits race-based immigration stops. The Vice President endorses unconstitutional door-to-door searches. And the President, who tried to overturn a previous election, has questioned the upcoming midterm elections, pardoned his supporters, including the most violent, and directed the FBI and Justice Department to target his political enemies: The American government is functionally lawless.

Simultaneously, ICE, the immigration and customs enforcement agency, has seemingly been transformed into a national police force designed to project Trump’s personal power. It has a bigger budget than the FBI, DEA, ATF, and U.S. Marshalls combined; larger, in fact, than all but 15 of the world’s militaries. It will soon have more detention capacity than the entire U.S. federal prison system. And the Department of Homeland Security has enlarged its workforce by 120 per cent, with a recruitment drive featuring neo-Nazi themed slogans and videos.

In short, the regime has created what Nazi-era Jewish labour lawyer Ernst Fraenkel called “the dual state.” As former constitutional litigator David French explained in The New York Times, when discussing the ICE killings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti: “The Nazis didn’t create their totalitarian state immediately. Instead, they were able to lull much of the population to sleep just by keeping their lives relatively normal … But if you crossed the government, then you passed into a different state entirely, where you would feel the full weight of fascist power — regardless of the rule of law.”

Many will call references to Germany in the Thirties indecent and alarmist. Still, if you told people a year ago that Donald Trump would oversee any of the above, they would have said you were out of your mind. (Much less that he would bomb Iran, Nigeria, and Venezuela and threaten war against the European Union over Greenland.) Trump may not be Hitler, but do Stephen Miller or the other Nazi cosplayers in Trump’s orbit sound much different? Imagine this clearly fascistregime with another three years — or more — of unaccountable power.

At what point is it no longer irresponsible to imagine worst-case scenarios involving America? At what point is it simply realistic to consider the unthinkable? Not because it will happen, but because there are legitimate fears that it might. American friends of mine in Massachusetts are considering selling their home and moving to Montreal as they imagine a collapsed real estate market in a MAGA militarized north-east. Some might say they’re panicking. But every democratic implosion is a fantasy future until it becomes a tragic past.

While it may seem fanciful, for example, it would be wise to assess how many American refugees we can take should the United States devolve into a full-fledged tyranny with ever-expanding, unaccountable deportation centres. We took 50,000 draft dodgers during the Vietnam War. But millions could flee north in an Insurrection Act-inspired horror show in blue states. As a second order concern, how should we respond if Trump accuses us of harbouring radical anti-American domestic terrorists?

Worst of all, there doesn’t appear to be an off ramp. There is no chance the U.S. Senate will ever convict Trump in an impeachment trial: That would require 67 votes; Trump’s insurrection trial only managed 57. Likewise, there is no chance Trump will ever be removed for incapacity under the 25th amendment: That requires a majority of the cabinet and the vice president, and if Trump resists, a full two thirds vote by both the House and Senate.

Some put their faith in November’s midterm elections. But nothing prevents Trump’s DHS from flooding Democratic strongholds with ICE thugs to suppress the vote. Trump has said he should have seized the voting machines in 2020. He has the power to invoke the Insurrection Act and mobilize the military to suppress public protests. And, looking ahead to 2028, Vice President J.D. Vance has said that, unlike his predecessor, he’d have manipulated the 2020 Electoral College to overturn the election and elect Trump.

An erratic tyranny to our south is a national-security nightmare. Trump’s “Donroe Doctrine” asserts American control over the entire Western hemisphere. We need to ask ourselves if Canada is to the United States what Ukraine is to Russia’s “near abroad” or Poland was to Germany’s “breathing space.” This is critical as the American rationale for taking Greenland (to keep Russia and China out of the Arctic) directly applies to the Canadian north.

Would the American military refuse illegal orders from its Commander-in-Chief to seize the infrastructure of our Arctic monitoring stations or mining centres like Fort McMurray? One would have said yes, until this fall’s war crimes in the Caribbean when the U.S. military blew up a series of small boats and killed survivors; or when it bombed Iran, Nigeria, and Venezuela without congressional approval; or when it removed the latter’s president to take the country’s oil. And it would be foolhardy to ignore Trump’s purge of senior military leadership and its replacement by regime loyalists.

Our own military is taking the threat seriously: It has war gamed a U.S. invasion of Canada not because it is likely, but because it is no longer beyond the realm of possibility. Our military planners believe the U.S. would defeat us within two days in a sudden decapitation strike, such as Putin attempted in Ukraine. They believe we would need to respond to occupation with drones and guerrilla warfare. Does this require a reassessment of the government’s policy on gun ownership?

One step we could take is to join with the Northern and Baltic states (NB8). The goal would be to extend mutual protection across the Arctic Circle from the Baltic Sea to our border with Alaska. Currently, the NB8 is designed to counter threats from Russia and China, but given America’s designs on Greenland (on hold, but for how long?), it is surely a third adversary.

We have other security concerns: Trump has repeatedly called for Canada to become the 51st state; he has posted three maps showing the U.S. owning our country. Alberta separatists are welcomed at Mar-a-Lago and by under-secretary level officials at the White House. In Davos, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent publicly supported Alberta separating from Canada and joining the United States. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum tweeted a map of a “New Interior” which shows Canada, Mexico, and Greenland subsumed by America.

This is far removed from any acceptable international behaviour. It is a form of hybrid warfare. Do we continue to buy military aircraft from an openly hostile nation that mocks and threatens our existence? If we purchase equipment from Europe instead, how should we respond to the inevitable retaliation?

How do we counter the waves of MAGA disinformation as we face possible independence referendums in Alberta and Quebec? Should we regulate and block content on U.S.-owned social media sites? What would be the unintended consequences on our own speech if we could? What retaliation might we face from the Trump administration and its Silicon Valley allies?

And how do we combat a financial campaign to destroy us? Writing in The Globe and Mail, Thomas Homer-Dixon and Adam Gordon posit an Alberta referendum awash in MAGA money that sees separatists losing, but with 30 per cent of the vote. Trump calls the “fake” result “rigged” and claims the separatists won. They ask the him for help to “stop the steal” and he sends troops to the border and demands that we let Alberta become the “51st state.”

Then there are the economic-security threats we face, starting with unpredictable tariffs and a renegotiation of trade agreements with a partner whose word means nothing. In his excellent Davos speech, Prime Minister Mark Carney outlined what middle powers like Canada must do to reduce the leverage of “the hegemon.” But this is a long-term fix confronting an immediate problem.

We also need to address the long-term consequences of de-dollarization. BRICSnations have tried for years to oust the dollar as the world’s global reserve currency. They have failed because of America’s size and stability. But Fabio Panetta, Governor of the Bank of Italy and a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, is raising the issue in the EU, thanks to the domestic and geopolitical instability created by Trump’s rogue regime. How can we mitigate the effects of this global shift given our economic integration with America?

These are only some of the questions we face as the Unites States continues to transform from a pluralist democracy into a blood and soil dystopia. We shouldn’t panic. But we should definitely prepare for the possibility that the worst will arrive.


A week

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This week has been busy with appointments, with the dentist and today with the optometrist, I am very happy with the new frames I chose. Will came with me to chose the final eyeglass frame, I had chosen 6 frames and the sales clerk showed me 3 more, so I tried it all and asked Will what he thought. The reason for this is based on what a friend of ours said many years ago. If you make such a decision bring with you your significant other since this person has to look at you each day. We whittled it down and I am happy with my choice, I should get the new frame in 2 weeks. My prescription has changed somewhat, nothing dramatic. This Saturday I have the first lunch with my fellow tour guides to meet and chat. The Cruise ship Season opens on 29 April with Holland America who come to Charlottetown throughout the Season often 3 times a week.

This weekend in Calgary, the Conservative Party is holding a political convention and will have a vote on the leadership of Pierre Poilievre, a controversial and highly unpopular politician in Canada. Last year he lost his seat in Ottawa after 20 years in Parliament to a Liberal Party candidate who was running for the first time. In all the years in Parliament, Poilievre managed to do nothing at all, never introduced a bill, never did anything for his constituents. During the Election he managed to fritter away a 20 point lead, the media saw him as the next Prime Minister but surprise Dr Mark Carney got elected instead. Poilievre was able to arrange to run in Alberta again and won back a seat in the House. Currently PM Carney has a 60% popularity and climbing while Poilievre or PP has he is call has 24% and dropping. People holding him in Office is what is called in Canada the MAGA Maple crowd.

Alberta might have a referendum on separation from Canada this year. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been saying that the USA would welcome Alberta and the White House has promised funds 550 Billion $ to support the movement. Trump is favourable to regime change in Canada. Just yesterday he threatened sending the USAF into Canadian Air Space if need be if we do not buy 88 F-35 fighter jets. We have to remind ourselves that the separatist movement in Alberta is small but vocal it gathers about 16% in popularity and most Albertans are proud Canadians. People do understand what they would loose if they were able to leave the Federation. Also our Constitution has no mechanism for such a thing to happen.

Quebec is scheduled to have an election in October, the out going out of office and the current Quebec Premier is retiring. The separatist Parti Quebecois and its young leader Paul Saint-Pierre Plamondon (48) is fired up to impose a third referendum on separation from Canada. He is known in the media as PSPP is following an old recipe used by the PQ in the last 60 years, recalling the history of 250 years ago as the old grievance or of political wrongs 80 years old. The PQ lives in the past and has not program or ideas on how to solve the economic crisis, affordability issues, housing crisis and prefers to attack immigrants, and labels anyone who does not speak French, ”British colonials”. As a political leader PSPP is very dismissive of anyone who does not agree with him. He also refuses to see the serious threat Trump poses to Quebec, he believes he could make a deal. Thing is, at the moment it does appear as if he could win the next election in Quebec. The Polls indicate that 80% of Quebec’s population of 9 million are opposed and do not even want a referendum. Well let us hope that between today and October things change.

Another snow storm coming Sunday and Monday, we should be getting about 30cm of snow and high winds, squalls etc, from the North-East. I have no where to go so just stay home. Mr Teeter will not want to go out either, though we must.

This photo was taken yesterday Prime Minister Mark Carney and the star of the television series Heated Rivalry, 24 yr old Hudson Williams. Who gifted the PM this wool fleece he wore in one episode of the show. This fleece was made in Toronto by a couple who made it at home and have a small business which has now taken off, everybody wants that fleece. The event held in Ottawa was promoting Canadian movie industry. The PM said that studios “south of the border” want to tone down the content of Heated Rivalry. “What is the point of that?” he said. Carney then added that the show should only be made in Canada because it’s a country that “celebrates what makes us different.”

Snow and Fashion

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Well the snow storm that hit NYC a few days ago, moved along the Atlantic coast and then turn towards the open Atlantic well before coming near us. So Sunday night and then Monday, I thought we are out of it again due to the wind, well not so fast, there was another storm coming from Montreal area right behind it and it snowed from Monday evening until noon time on Tuesday and we got a foot of snow and lots of snow drifts which makes driving really difficult. On Tuesday morning the city was very quiet, no cars anywhere and many schools and businesses only opened around 11am.

I had a dentist appointment for 09:15am, I called them, oh yes we are open. So I drove over to them, not a long distance its in Cornwall the little town next to us I would say about 10Km and I was alone on the road, lots of white out and drifting snow, some areas are rural with open fields and forests. The difficult part was the traffic circles, as you turn the car tends to swerve and you slow down to avoid losing control. I had 4 such traffic circles on the way, it was ok but coming home I thought I am not going anywhere else today.

This week the celebrated fashion designer Valentino died at 93 in Rome. Valentino Garavani, was born in Voghera, Lombardi in May 1932. His father was an electrician, however Valentino at a young age was fascinated by fashion design and at 15 told his parents that he would study to become a fashion designer. He belongs to the old school of Yves St-Laurent, Balenciaga, Givenchy, Lagerfeld, Armani. I remember in 2007 a retrospective exhibit of his work in Rome at the famous Ara Pacis of Augustus, celebrating 45 years, his greatest creation on display surrounded by this ancient monument to the first Emperor of Rome. A small black jacket made of moire silk incrusted with red coral attracted my attention, it was beautiful and at the same time extremely elegant. Also on display were accessories and many of his glamorous gown creations. His customers were the easily recognizable names in Italy and all over the world, movie actress, industry moguls, royalty, and other famous names. All unique creations, one of a kind. This what made Rome special, wonderful exhibitions celebrating Italian creations in many cultural areas.





A decade

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In 2026 marks 10 years living in PEI. We move to the Island after a holiday in Winter around Islander Day February 16. We started looking for an apartment but back then it was not so easy. Lots on the market but nothing to our liking, finally we did find a place on Water street with a view of the river and ships, we moved in on 1 May 2016.

Much has happened since we arrived, the city has seen a population boom and tourism has increased dramatically after 2023 and COVID. Unfortunately the infrastructure is failing, lack of planning and general incompetence. We finally moved to a new address in a more residential neighbourhood for the quiet it provided and are very happy here.

We have met a lot of people, got involved socially, explored the Island and made seafood a staple of our diet. We go to our cottage each Summer in August at French River which has become our favourite spot on the Island. So you could say that we have settled in and know our way around. We retired to PEI for the tranquility, peace and greenery by the ocean with the slow pace of life.

These two photos above are of the view from our cottage, our beach, always quiet, the New London rear light house, the Cavendish Bay, the other side is Cavendish and all things Anne of G.G. you can see lots of fishing boats coming and going the harbours of the South West River and of French River are on the extreme right of this picture. This area is part of the National Park which covers a lot of ground, protecting it from development.

I noticed yesterday that being now at the end of January, the days are getting longer. At Christmas time the sun would set around 04:25 pm. now it sets at 5:25pm. days getting longer is always a welcome sign.