Hooray! My banjo venus shirt has arrived at Topatoco! Get your damn dirty hands on it here!
If you’d like to see/hear more examples of Nova Scotia Gaelic itself, click through above to check out videos put up by the project An Drochaid Eadarainn (The Bridge Between Us), many of them interviews done by an off camera Effie Rankin, a teacher from the Hebrides who moved to Cape Breton in the 70s when they first tried to save the language that had nearly died in one generation. Effie is a great lady. If you scroll down, you’ll even see my own relative Dan Angus Beaton, who was a keeper of the old stories, and a great storyteller himself.
A short little documentary about the history and sentiments around Nova Scotia gaelic. With a bonus commentary from Mi'kmaw elder Mary Lafford on what local language means to her. I was poking around for anything new on the subject after talking about working in my hometown museum, and found this.
I haven’t a clue what outside knowledge of NS Gaels there is in general, but if you read what I post, you know I bring it up. It’s very much it’s own thing, outside of Scottishness. No Robbie Burns day stuff, no haggis. Very Canadian, perhaps in the same way Acadian culture is French, but distinctly Canadian.
My hometown is one of the more prominent Gaelic communities, and for a long time, we had the only high school to offer it in North America. Not that it was cool, I mean, you might be considered a real dork for being into it. I remember going to Gaelic choir class and hoping no one my age saw me. Did I ever tell you I’m a dork? Secret’s out. I’m not even a good singer.
I used to think, when I was very small, that everyone had a culture that they experienced as distinctly and entrenched as the one we had. Now I see how lucky, and unlucky, it was to have such a thing. I’m very attracted to culturally strong, isolated places. I will always feel a pang of loss and guilt for leaving my struggling culture and community, even though leaving is what people do, and change is a thing that is inevitable. Many complicated feelings that will probably come out in some sobbing old comics someday. But even though I’m not there, I may yet get the chance to go back, and I’ll always promote what they’re up to.
With that in mind, if you are ever interested in the language, Cape Breton’s Gaelic College is a fine place to start. They also teach music and other skills. And St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish has a fine Celtic Studies department. My neighbour teaches there.
And if you were interested in the language or the area but don’t know where to start, you can always email me, and I will point you in the right direction.
I can’t recommend The Century of the Self enough. Click through on the image above for a great documentary.
Chuck Groenink gave me the heads up and the link, he has a fantastic tumblr himself.
Heating the Rez →
We are not sure when Indiegogo featured “Heating the Rez” on their homepage in “New This Week” but we were just alerted to that awesome gesture by Indiegogo; We are almost 50% funded for the start of the renewable solution and are working on 2 fundraiser runs (Rapid City, SD and Bismarck, ND) to…
“The goal, the modus operandi of Lakota society is to be a good relative, to be generous where you can be generous, to help where you can help.”
Worthy words from a worthy fundraiser, which I was glad to contribute to, and which you may like to consider. We are all feeling the cold this winter.
While we’re on the subject,
Come children, I would like to tell you a story. But I would like that story to be in the shape of a penis.
Penis tree
Roman de la Rose, France 14th century.
Français 25526, fol. 106-160r (compillation contains fols. 106v, 111v, 160r)
hmmmm
no wait
no
hmmmm
(Source: facebook.com)
![vivelareine:
“ An engraving of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
[source: Bibliothèque nationale de France]
”
Aww I don’t wanna chop off their heads! It looks like you came to visit them, and they both came to the door and also they made you a pie...](https://64.media.tumblr.com/8baa9497f250dc220aab5cb6ee0fd56d/tumblr_n0gl0bAGJA1qatfdco1_500.jpg)
An engraving of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
[source: Bibliothèque nationale de France]
Aww I don’t wanna chop off their heads! It looks like you came to visit them, and they both came to the door and also they made you a pie because they knew you were coming.
January 24,1890: After months of public attention and anticipation, Nellie Bly, a reporter for the New York World, arrives in New York, completing her round-the-world trip in 72 days, 6 hours, and 11 minutes, beating the pace set in Jules Verne’s fictional Around the World in 80 Days.
McLoughlin Bros., Round the World with Nellie Bly [board game], 1890. New-York Historical Society, The Liman Collection, 2000.44.
Am ace-reporter Nellie Bly board game? Did I travel back to 1890, and it’s my birthday?

Tree Frog commune in Guilford, Vermont in the 70s.
now this is a commune that speaks my language
put your nasty knees away

Nice pug, would abdicate throne for, A+

French-Scottish WWI Union - Riflemen with mounted Bayonets
Aw! The Auld Alliance!
(Source: ebay.com, via wahnwitzig)
A very good piece on an image that went viral not long ago, and indeed was sent to me several times! Click through.
‘The prince and the pauper - a tale for young people of all ages’ by Mark Twain; illustrated by W. Hatherell. Published 1909 by Harper & Row Publishers, New York.
See the complete book here.
delighted to have the great link to the book itself







