On Sunday morning,at the start of our third week in Canada,we went to Sears, one of the many get-everything department stores, to buy track suit pants for Cilliers. Cilliers came out of the fitting rooms with his mind made up about which pair of pants he wanted and then we just strolled through the shop gawking at all the merchandise and having mini heart attacks when seeing the price tags. After about 10 minutes Cilliers made a choking sound and yelped that he had left his wallet and Blackberry in the fitting rooms. I wasn’t worried, this is Canada after all and not SA, so I just sent him at a run to fetch them. Unfortunately a thief had already gotten his grubby little fingers on the loot. Cilliers’ phone and wallet with about $400(!!), was gone. We didn’t yet have any insurance in Canada so it was a dead loss.
We were really angry at Cilliers for being so absent minded but
also felt bad for him as he was still whatsapping with a lot of his friends in
SA and now that means of communication was gone. He was also very angry at
himself and for months would grumble every time we had to go to Sears. Sometimes
the best lessons have to be learnt the hard way and hopefully he’ll be a bit
more responsible with his stuff in future.
While still in SA I joined an internet forum for South
Africans living in, or wanting to move to Canada. One of the families from the forum contacted us and
invited us for a visit. Charles and Catherine live in Erin, about a 30 minute
drive from Guelph. They have 2 boys, aged 9 and 11, and have been in Canada for
9 years. Off we went to go visit complete strangers we met on the
internet....... exactly what we warn our kids about!
In the forest of our new friends |
What a wonderful visit we had on this lovely warm spring day. The boys biked, we had a stroll in the forest and our new friends treated us to a wonderful braai on their deck. After this lovely day sitting outside, braaiing and enjoying the sunshine, the next day dawned cold and grey and it started snowing! The kids were quite excited, it being their first snow, ever. If you like the weather here just wait a minute.....
The boys all bundled up while its snowing |
This is the deck where we sat in warm sunshine the previous day |
Loest’s class was incubating some chicken eggs and on Friday
Kobus, being in the poultry business and all, presented a talk to the class
about chickens. This was such a big event for Loest and he was so very proud to
have his dad there.
The eggs eventually hatched and the boys loved the little chicks |
On Friday evening we went to Pizza Hut, remember when we
still had those on every corner in SA? The pizzas were great but, once again,
gigantic in size. We were learning that Canadian portions are much bigger than
what we’re used to. A medium pizza in SA is as big as a small one here and a
large pizza here.....well, it is unfinishable. Our entire family of four could
have dined on one large pizza and we ordered 4!! At least we had some pizza leftovers to enjoy
for the next week.
Just before annihilation by pizza |
Something more needs to be said of the glorious mojito, this
favourite of Ernest Hemingway. Although I liked this refreshing Cuban libation
before it really became my favourite whilst visiting Cancun, Mexico, in August
2011. Ever since then the sweet taste would conjure up images of dancing the Macarena
on the beach with a mariachi band, scuba diving in the azure Caribbean, palm
trees swaying in the wind and being in a far away exotic place. It is just
nowhere to be found in Canada’s restaurants. Is it just too much effort to make
with its myriad of ingredients? The excuse most often given is the lack of mint.
Perhaps I should grow my own mint and take it with to a restaurant. Imagine the
waitress’s face when I yank out my own supply of mint from my big handbag! No
more excuses signorita and bring me my mojito, pronto!!
Television and radio ads are really funny. There is no law
prohibiting competitive advertising so rival product bashing is common.
Sometimes a company would only allude to its competition but often the competitor
would be named outright and its product slammed in no uncertain terms. Nandos
would have an absolute field day here! I’ve never heard so many ads promoting
products to enhance male performance, from the “total testosterone male
enhancement system”, to the product hailed as so effective that one guy bought
the entire company after trying it once! Wonder with which brain he was thinking..... Viagra is offered at rock bottom
prices with online ordering promising to be discreet......
In SA we speak an African British English while in Canada it’s more American
English, so quickly we learnt that terms here are somewhat different. A robot is a traffic light, tissues are Kleenex and a shopping centre
is a mall. Toilet paper is advertised as bath tissue and chips are french
fries. Potato wedges are called fat potatoes and Tippex is white-out. There are
no suburbs but sub-divisions and sellotape is scotch tape. Eight thirty is the
correct term and not half past eight. Some people call a slowcooker a crockpot
and I elicited many giggles when explaining that a crockpot in SA means someone
who’s gone nuts. One lady said she would never think of her crockpot in quite
the same way again.