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Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

**PLEASE PARDON THE CONSTRUCTION DUST. My website is in the process of being completely revamped, and my brand new site will be unveiled later in 2021! Stay tuned! ** 

Every once in a while, Debbie shares new art, writing and resources; subscribe below. Browse the archives here.

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Monday
Jun252007

Nicholas Kennedy, neighbourly bbq, Relay For Life


Photo courtesy Nicholas Kennedy.


In an earlier Blathering, I mentioned meeting Nicholas Kennedy from Trip Print Press at Doors Open. Since then, I've been researching more about the letterpress process and have also interviewed Nicholas for blogTO. Do check out the interview, which was posted online this morning:

Nicholas Kennedy and the Black Art Of Letterpress

Jeff and I both had fun at the annual neighbours' bbq/picnic last night. It's our third year; the first was after we got possession of the house but before we officially moved in. I remember how nervous I was, meeting many of the neighbours for the first time! Would they like us? Would we like them? The answer was yes to both questions, fortunately, and I feel tremendously lucky to be part of this little community.

We set up tables and chairs on the street, with everyone contributing something to the meal. Last night, I discovered that one of my neighbours, professional musician David McLachlan,
used to do gigs with Lloyd Landa. It looks like David's going to be performing at the Renaissance Cafe, the same venue as Heather Dale last month. I'm hoping to go, depending on cottage plans.



Above: Scott Murray and me, photo by Walter. As I mentioned in yesterday's Blathering, my pals Walter and Scott kept me company during the wee hours of the morning during Relay For Life. You can see more of Walter's photos in his Flickr set.



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Saturday
Jun232007

Post-relay: A personal account

Team Hope!


I've posted my Relay For Life report on blogTO.com (please do check it out!), but thought I should add some notes here which I suspect might be too personal, long and photo-heavy for blogTO. :-)

Luminary for my Aunt Agnes


My cousin Dan and his partner Crina were kind enough to give me a ride to and from E.T. Seton Park for Relay For Life, an overnight non-competitive relay whose goal is to raise funds for cancer research and community-based support services. Dan's father and son, Crina's cousin and one of Crina's co-workers were also on our team, which Dan named Team Hope.

Dan's father, by the way, is the Uncle John whom I mentioned in an earlier Blathering; he had a heart attack during a family Christmas party I attended, and also had a QUADRUPLE bypass heart operation earlier this year.

Some Registration volunteers


All of us had been affected by cancer in some way, either by losing a loved one or having friends or family who have been affected. Crina's experience, however, was more direct...

Dan and Crina


When we picked up our registration packages, I noticed that Crina (above, on the right) had a different t-shirt, and then I saw her ribbon. I had chatted briefly with Crina at relatives' gatherings, but never knew she was a cancer survivor herself! Crina works for Telus, and her company told her that they would match any pledges that she was able to raise. How cool is that?

Signs on our tent


When we arrived, we set up our base camp in Tent City and decorated our tents with signs (above: a photo taken partway through the sign-making process), and I brought plastic sunflowers to stick in the ground.

Team Hope sign


Here's a sign in honour of Crina's mom:

Tent sign


Some army guys (I have no idea if they're really in the army, but they dressed in fatigues and were incredibly disciplined and fit, so I'm assuming so) in the plot next to us set up the tent shown above. These guys ended up winning the Spirit Award, mainly because they RAN most of the relay (12 hours' worth), and many of them carried heavy backpacks and gear the whole way.

Military tent


For me, the most moving part of the whole event was the Survivor Victory Lap ceremony, where the names of over 80 cancer survivor attendees (currently in treatment or in longterm recovery) were read out loud as they walked around the track once. Some were in wheelchairs, some were carried, and some were led by the hand, like the little girl below.

Young cancer survivor


Then we started walking. As I walked, I sometimes read the names on some of the "luminaries" placed around the inner edge of the track. A luminary is a candle placed in some sand inside a paper bag, inscribed with the name of someone whose life has been touched by cancer, either loved ones lost or friends and family who have survived cancer. Like this one:

In honour of Beckett


On the luminaries, "in honour of" was the phrase used to pay a tribute to cancer survivors, and "in memory of" for loved ones lost to cancer. As I mentioned in an earlier Blathering, you can buy luminaries before the event or at the event before the Luminaries ceremony.

Here's one for my Aunt Agnes from my uncle:

Luminary for my Aunt Agnes


And here's one I dedicated to my mom:

Luminary for my mom


As dusk fell, everyone was asked to stop walking/running, and we all watched as volunteers lit the candles in all the luminaries as a piper from the 48th Highlanders Regiment played, followed by a moment of silence.

Luminaries ceremony


I grieved for my mom, who died way too young, and other friends and family affected by cancer...but also celebrated the fact that some of them have survived as well. All around the track, many hugs were exchanged, many tears shed.

Hope


Walking around a track all night may sound incredibly boring, but the Relay of Life organizers did a fantastic job of keeping participants entertained. Below: Kuki Dube and a guitarist whose name I unfortunately didn't get:

Relay For Life: Kiki Dube


I also enjoyed Amanda Bentley's performance (see below), and ended up buying her CD for $10, $5 of which was going to the Canadian Cancer Society. Amanda had great audience rapport, and got a bunch of us singing along on her songs. :-)

Amanda Bentley performs at Relay For Life

I've listed some of the many activities at the event in my blogTO report on Relay For Life, and here's a photo of one of them: Latin line-dancing lessons!

Latin line-dancing lessons


The yellow shirts, by the way, were the shirts worn by volunteers. The volunteers at this event were fantastic, I have to say, and helped in pretty much every aspect of the night, from food to registration to luminaries. See my blogTO report for more details.

Food tent volunteers


I was astounded by the amount of food available for free to participants, and available throughout the night and next morning. The Food Tent was kept stocked by BBQ Brothers, Healthy Snacks, Pizza Hut, and Breakfast Foods. There was lots of water available (you had to bring your own water bottle) as well as coffee, tea, hot chocolate and Gatorade.

As the evening got cooler, I ended up putting on every layer that I had brought. Someone started a bonfire near the main stage, and a volunteer in the Food Tent (I don't know her name, but she was cheery through the whole night!) brought over marshmallows to roast.

Bonfire at Relay For Life


Around 2 a.m., I got a surprise visit from my pals Scott and Walter! They suddenly appeared beside me as I walked, and they kept me company going around the track for a while. Thanks, guys...that meant a great deal to me.

Surprise visit from friends!


Around 5 a.m., I saw a hint of daylight on the horizon:

Hint of daylight


I headed for the Food Tent, where some tired (but cheerful!) volunteers manned the breakfast tables:

Volunteer at 5 a.m.


I went to tell some of my team that breakfast was available in the tent and almost didn't see two of them in lawn chairs, buried beneath sleeping bags:

Napping


My Uncle John's the one on the left!

I had originally set a goal of raising $500 but reached that goal within a few hours of posting about my Relay For Life participation, and ended up with over three times that amount by the end of the Relay because of all your generosity. It wasn't so much the amount as the number of people who donated that floored me, though...family, friends and acquaintances, people I've met online but not in person, and several perfect strangers (but strangers no more :-)). I would list names here but I suspect at least a few would want to stay anonymous, so I'm just going to say THANK YOU SO MUCH! Team Hope raised a total of $3,342 this year.

And thanks very much to my cousin Dan for inviting me to be part of Team Hope. It's a night I'll never forget.

You can see the rest of my photos on Flickr and a selection in my blogTO post.



Luminaries



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Friday
Jun222007

Relay For Life tonight!

The Story


Above: My daily doodle. I try to make a habit of doodling every day, totally for fun. Good for the soul and to make sure I never take my drawing so seriously that it loses its joy. The illustration contains several possible stories, both from the little girl's and the monster's perspective, so I've called it "The Story."

Heh, sorry for creeping some of you out with my transformed faces yesterday. Aleksej has pointed out that Google has made the face recognition feature official:

"Seem to be official - there is a radio button group in Advanced search:
Content types Return images that contain (o) any content ( ) news content ( ) faces."

Pure water flavor?


As I've mentioned in an earlier Blathering, I love trying out new lip balms. I picked up the one above at our local Pharmaplus to take with me to Relay For Life tonight. I was intrigued by the cool packaging but especially by the bizarre "pure water flavor" description. Why advertise a flavorless taste?

Trying it out, however, reveals that their "pure water flavor" is vaguely sweetish. Not bad, really. I like the small size, making it more convenient to slip into a pocket.

And huge thanks, by the way, to all those who are sponsoring me in Relay For Life (7 pm to 7 am tonight!). I'm getting new pledges every day, and (with your help) have raised $1490 for the Canadian Cancer Society, nearly three times my original goal. Your support means a great deal to me; THANK YOU SO MUCH. I know that some of you have also bought luminaries in honour of cancer survivors and loved ones lost.

No rain forecast for today/tonight, yay! I was prepared to walk in the rain, but would rather not, at least not for 12 hours. :-)

Will Write For Peanuts


Speaking of squirrels, Dave Weingart reminded me of this great squirrel story. :-)




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Thursday
Jun212007

Face transforming and facial recognition



I made the face transformations above at Face Transformer, an online experiment by the Perception Laboratory at the School of Psychology, at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. The rest of the site is worth perusing; topics include facial prototyping, facial aging, facial attractiveness, and perceptual asymmetry.

Thanks to Alex Onsager for the link. Alex is co-author of Graffiti, a new Facebook drawing program. I tried out this app but had problems with it, went back to my old Graffiti program after posting about the bug in Alex's Graffiti discussion board. He responded almost immediately and seems very keen on fixing the program. (Note: Graffiti is being taken offline tonight for feature upgrades, so you probably shouldn't add it to your Facebook profile until tomorrow.) I'm going to give Alex's Graffiti another try later this week.

Google has apparently added some face recognition in its searches, though I don't believe this feature is "official" yet. But try this:

Go to Google images.
Type in a search term.
Go to the browser entry field and append "&imgtype=face" to the search string.
I tried doing this with the term filk, for example, and was floored by how accurately it picked out images featuring faces compared to a general search for the term without the appended text.




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Wednesday
Jun202007

Walking in the rain, my review in The National Post

Walking in the rain


I was at The Flying Dragon yesterday, taking some photos for an upcoming profile in blogTO, when I noticed that it had started raining outside the shop. And I mean RAINING, coming down in buckets with the wind whipping the rain everywhere. I wrapped my camera in a plastic shopping bag and tucked it into my backpack, and waited.

Being trapped in a children's bookstore is far from a hardship (except on the wallet; I have low willpower), but I wanted to get back to work. So after vainly waiting for about 15 minutes for the rain to subside (it didn't), I headed home in my shorts and t-shirt: no umbrella or raincoat. After a few minutes it became clear to me that I was going get totally drenched, no matter what, so I just gave in and enjoyed the experience.

There's something hugely liberating about walking home in a fierce rainstorm and not caring if you get wet. I splashed through puddles and fast-moving street water in my Chacos, feeling the water run down my arms and legs, soaking my t-shirt and shorts. It was wonderful.

Plus I figure it might be good practice for Relay For Life in case it rains this Friday!

But on the topic of yesterday's storm, blogTO has an amazing/scary photo of some of the storm damage in Toronto!

My first National Post writing credit!


For those of you who get the National Post, check out page A8 for my blogTO restaurant review of Patisserie La Cigogne. You can read the full review (I edited the review down to 250 words for the print version) in the blogTO restaurant reviews section.

The Rejection




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