Saturday, August 10, 2019

SUMMER VACATION : DESTINATION REGINA


When people asked me where I am going for summer vacation, and I answer Regina, there are generally no follow up questions. For me, though, Saskatchewan has become my favourite vacation destination, and I love every minute of it.

We arrived early afternoon , and our plane was a little late. My parents, brother, sister-in-law and nephew were waiting for us, and when they paid the parking, it was only $2 and $4 dollars !

We went to DQ and had novel treats: an orange flavoured Dreamsicle and Reese’s blizzard. We sat outside in these round picnic tables made of cement and stone, that remind me of my youth, and are repeated in the garbage cans and drive ways. In the posted history of the business my new favourite adjective was listed to describe the Peanut Buster Parfait, Scrumpdillyiscious!


Wascana park is in full bloom and there are Canada Geese and enormous pelicans and even cormorants catching fish in the lake. You have to watch where you step, but it becomes second nature very quickly.

The Victoria Street Bridge is the longest bridge over the shortest body of water.

The garden bordering the lake is at the foot of the legislature building. It is a tribute to QEII. Her favourite horse was a Burmese mare,  trained at Fort Walsh in Saskatchewan, and given to her. I think she once credited her safety to it, when, because of its training, it did not rear up when she was shot at. You can read the story here.



These pebble studded garbage cans have been there as long as I can remember. The same surface can be found at the A and W patio table and surrounding benches.
Each visit to her namesake Regina was documented along the garden, 6 in all. The benches and Legislative building are built from familiar Tyndall limestone, full of cephalopods and sunflower coral. My mom recalled seeing Queen Elizabeth in a car turning from Victoria to College with her crown on while celebrating my parents 20th anniversary in 1987. My sister-in-law remembered her waving from a parade in Brandon.

I thought I would just use the bathroom at the Legislative Building, but we were invited in for a tour. It was the first time I remember making it past the rotunda, and I enjoyed it completely. There are many types of marble in the grand space that sits under the dome, lit not by sunlight but electricity. The stairs are Quebec marble, the balustrade around the rotunda Swedish. The floor in two tones is from Vermont, the bases of the pillars Irish, and the most stunning was a truly marbled green type from Cyprus that made up all the pillars.




We were treated to several galleries, with premiers painted by the artist of their choosing. Lorne Calvert was done by a hyperrealist. Allan Blakeney by an impressionist, well posed. Some were less well done or poorly posed.


The Qu’appele Gallery had the lieutenant governors, and included a portrait of Tommy Douglas by Lilas Torrence Newton of Beaver Hall fame, and Sylvia Fedorak, who taught my mom physics in her radiology technician school.


The court chamber was designed full of symbolism. The room had curves in the corners to replicate the shape of the queen’s crown, and the ceiling was decorated with as many rosettes as there were jewels in the crown. The detailed woodwork was done by a 17 year old master woodworker!

Even the red carpet leading up to the rotunda, when changed, as upgraded for a green colour to represent the prairies. The pillars were labelled with Roman numerals from 1910, when Georgeos Rex died and Edward Rex began his reign.


Walter Scott, the first premier, had a vision, and it was that vision that had the building erected, at a significant cost of 1.8 million dollars!

In a speech at the laying of the cornerstone of the Legislative Building on October 4, 1909:
"I may say with pardonable pride that examination of the plans and design shows that, while it will be by no means huge or extravagant, it will be in appearance, stability and durability, such a building as any person may be willing without any hesitation to have his name associated with and inscribed upon - such a building as will appropriately represent the character and ambitions of the people of the province."
Walter Scott
Tommy Douglas was honoured with his actual glasses dipped in bronze and added to his bust, as was Diefenbaker, the only PM to reside in Saskatchewan, and bearer of good luck if you rub his nose, as remembered to be shiny bronze by my mom, but very much patinated now.


There was even the table from the Quebec summit that was recalled in the painting of the Fathers of Confederation. The library contained the local papers of all the small communities that have a printing press, and serves as a reference library even today.

On the home front, we watched lightening storm before the rain, and played a rousing game of Pandemic where we worked together to save the world, were instructed on the LEGO game my niece was inventing, ate tacos, trampolined,  read Wings of Fire, "played" with Josie,  ate oerogies, curry,  relaxed in playhouses, drank tea with the ever plentiful Tollhouse cookies, and laughed a lot.

Humor of the day: from Jeff Gaffigan, "To call it diarrhea would be an insult to the word."

My new favorite mantra: My goal is that my next failure isn’t as bad as the last.

Science Centre, Frisbee (Disc) Golf, the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, Lucy, Santorini, Milky Way, Bats, S'mores and a Fire, Kayak and Canoe, Pelicans and Cormorants, BBQ, Rhubarb Crisp, Crafting, Climbing, Reading Certificates, Titles from Childhood.


Bro crashed into the trees facetiming with oblivious mom on the shore. Lucy bit the branches and wouldn't let go. Cormarants wobbled in the trees with their ill-suited webbed feet in the wind. It took a while for PP to cede the steering to the back of the boat, but we found our rhythm!
The New York Natural History Museum has nothing on the Royal Saskatchewan Museum!
These are the scenes I always think of. Fantastic paintings with taxodermy wildlife.


Even after fire damage, they remain as I remembered.


December 2, 1751 14:30
An early winter allied Cree and Assiniboin camp in the Assiniboine River Valley. Three families  have been here for a couple of weeks. A fourth family arrives. Mother and sister put up the tipis. Daughter is in search of wood. Father and brother-in-laws arrive with freshly killed elf. Grandfather tells stories to his grandsons that are only told in winter.
European trade had been happening for almost a century. Horses were starting to be obtained by the Assiniboin from the North Dakota Mandan people. The Cree from the North were moving South and had guns. The allied Assiniboin and Cree were the dominant force on the Saskatchewan plains for the next century.
A trickster called Wi-se-ke-cahk caused a great flood, and there were three animals left with him after: a beaver, an otter and a muskrat. The muskrat retrieved a piece of earth under the waters, and the land was restored at the cost of his life.
Others tell a tale of a wolf and a raven. The raven flies to the four corners of the world, but fails to locate land. The worlf succeeds. On the southern plains, the swan, goose and loon help. Grandmother turtle also helps form the earth.
"This is the world's only known coprolite from a Tyrannosaurus rex."
This is a generous scoop of homemade rhubarb crisp.
This a perfect piece of pie.
I am not sure if I should be proud or disturbed that I read 347 books that year!
My favourite book in Grade 3.
I remember this series, at Regent Park Library. 

Saskatoon, Hawks, Prairies, Vallies, Waffles and Saskatoons, Forestry Farm, Calico Critters, Friends.

Qu'appelle Valley at Chamberlain on the Louis Riel Trail (ie Highway 11)
Black tailed Prairie Dogs in captivity. In the wild, they only survive in Grasslands Provincial Park.

The Lumsden Hill and its magical Valley.

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