Murdoch Mysteries: The Vintage Canadian Steampunk Detective Series

Murdoch Mysteries is a Canadian drama television series set in vintage Toronto, Ontario. As the series began the year was 1895. The new seasons have progressed in time to where it is now the early 1900′s with new inventions and technology as they came along.

Murdoch is like a vintage mad scientist in a police officer’s uniform.

However, the show does take some liberties with technology and knowledge available at the time. Although they don’t step over the boundary of using something not invented yet, they do invent things which reflect our modern knowledge more than a police detective could have hoped for at that time. Some history purists may not like this but, I actually think it is part of the fun. Murdoch is like a steampunk/ Victorian age mad scientist in a police officer’s uniform solving crimes with science and logic.

Yannick Bisson stars as William Murdoch, a police detective and amateur scientist.

Wikipedia says Murdoch Mysteries is known as The Artful Detective in the United States. In Canada,Murdoch Mysteries runs on our wonderful CBC. I’m rewatching the series on NetFlix currently so it is getting well distributed, where ever and how ever you like to watch.

The television series is based on the series of novels by Maureen Jennings.

I read the books before they were turned into television. The books stand on their own. If you want a good story, especially a good vintage/ historical Victorian story, then take a look at the books. There are seven in the series but I found them all together as a collection on Amazon. (See the link below). It’s been years since I first read the books and I’m tempted to order the collection and read them all again myself.

What I remember of the character of Officer Murdoch from the books was a very quiet man, self contained, who cared about the people in town. He helped women who were out on the streets. Like people in that time period he did not date and take women home with him waving them off in the morning. There was a woman who lived in the same building and he liked her but didn’t quite date her. She had a son and Murdoch was happy to spend some time with him.

This woman and her son didn’t become his love interest in the television series. Instead he has a woman doctor, Julia Ogden, who helps him with his work and she becomes the woman he loves from near and afar over the series.

From the Books of Maureen Jennings to the movies and then on to become a weekly television series, known as Murdoch Mysteries.

Murdoch Mysteries

Murdoch Mysteries has become a favourite Canadian TV show. The cast has been interviewed by well known celebrities here in Canada. They have appeared on Canadian Air Farce. The Prime Minister of Canada is a fan of the show and appeared on it himself.

In Canada the Worms are Arrogant

The Arrogant WormsThe Arrogant Worms are from Ontario, Canada. Three men who write and perform comedy to their own music, in their own way. Not everyone will like them. They will step on some toes (quite a feat for worms). But, if you let your guard down they will make you laugh too. Don’t forget I did warn you – they step on toes – before you listen/ watch the video posts below.

There is even a song about Ontario sucking, so don’t think it’s just you.

Some Worm History

The Arrogant Worms met in university in 1990. Maybe they were chasing the same bird.

By 1991 they were performing on campus radio in Queens University, Kingston, Ontario.. That same year they appeared on CBC Radio’s Basic Black program. With encouragement from fans their first album was released in 1992, indie style.

Currently there are a dozen albums with Space being the latest of them.

Current members of the group are: Mike McCormick, Chris Patterson and Trevor Strong.

In 2003 the Canadian Arts Presenters Association recognized the Arrogant Worms as Touring Act of the Year.

More recently, the Worms were awarded the Peter Gzowski Award for donating their time and talent to the cause of literacy in Canada.

If you want to support, follow or try to explain your point of view to the Arrogant Worms you can find them online.

K. D. Lang: Red, White and Canadian

K.D. LangWhen she sang at the Canadian Olympics the US people watching with my Mom in Florida all insisted K.D. Lang was a man. But, K.D. Lang is a woman. She isn’t the typical woman celebrity looking like she just stepped off a glamorous magazine cover.

Get over the way she looks, the way she dresses and the whole beef thing (likely only the Canadians will know about that). The only thing you really need (and will want to) know about K.D. Lang is that she can sing.

She sings like there is no tomorrow and I feel that way when I play her CDs. I wish my machine was one which would just play the same CD over and over until the power finally went out and I could just keep hearing it all in my head anyway. When K.D. Lang sings you feel brought into the music, it becomes sound rather than something comprised of music written by human hands.

Not every song will be that loved but there are enough on this album to keep me happy.

Who is K D Lang?

Born as Kathryn Dawn Lang, November 1961, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Now you see where the K.D. comes from.

K.D. grew up on the Canadian Prairies with two sisters and a brother. She is a human and animal rights activist and both have gotten her in trouble in the past.

K.D. Lang sings with famous people: Anne Murray, Tony Bennett, Jane Siberry, Roy Orbison, Leonard Cohen and Elton John. She has won Juno and Grammy awards. She has a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame. She performed at the closing ceremony of the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta. More recently, she performed live at the opening ceremony of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada.

The Starlost: Vintage Canadian Science Fiction

If you are truly a Canadian science fiction fan/ geek you must know Starlost.

If you have never heard of Starlost you need to catch up on it! Starlost was a Canadian science fiction TV series created by Harlan Ellison and broadcast in 1973 on CTV in Canada. Ben Bova was the science advisor.

It was quirky and people will say it was not very good but I would say it had personality and was loads of fun to watch. But, I like science fiction when it’s not very good. (I do draw the line at down right awful though).

The Starlost was 16 episodes (1973 – 1974)

  • Keir Dullea as Devon
  • Gay Rowan as Rachel
  • Robin Ward as Garth

One Day you Discover your Planet is Actually One Community on the Spaceship, Ark

The Starlost is about Devon, Rachel and Garth who grow up in a backwards pioneer sort of community, Cypress Corners . Rachel, Devon and Garth are in a romantic triangle. Rachel wants Devon but is told to marry Garth. So they run away, Garth following. This is when the bottom drops out of their world.

Garth, Rachel and Devon are on a spaceship, the Ark, which is on a collision course with a Class G solar star. Cypress Corners has just been one domed community in a giant spaceship. They find this out when they discover a computer set up to provide assistance and answer questions should any of the Ark inhabitants wander outside of their community domes and discover they aren’t on a planet at all.

The TV series becomes the three of them working together, in spite of their differences, to try to keep the Ark and all it’s inhabitants from destruction. They meet other cultures who have been isolated in their own domes (biospheres) and evolved in unique ways. They also find out more about the Ark itself and those who built and ran it. However, they discover the crew of the bridge are dead when they find skeletal remains in spacesuits.

The most memorable part of the show for me was the computer man. Sometimes he was just a disembodied voice and other times he was the face on the screen when they interacted with the ship’s computer. The actor who played the computer and voice was William Osler. He was very distinctive and a bit intimidating (even scary) when I watched the show long ago.

Quirky, old science fiction TV series and movies are a treasure to be shared.

Beautiful Joe: The Famous Dog from Ontario

I read Beautiful Joe as a kid. I can still remember having the book with me for a sneak read at night. I’d go into the bathroom and sit on the side of the tub cause I could stretch my legs out there. Beautiful Joe was one of the books I most remember from my childhood. Much later I found out the story was from right here in Ontario and the story was not fictional.

Beautiful Joe was a Real Dog

beautiful joe

Beautiful Joe was a real dog, a puppy in 1890, from the town of Meaford, in Ontario, Canada. The dog was a mongrel (or a mutt as we call them) and owned by a milkman who beat and starved the dog nearly to death.

The young dog was rescued by Walter Moore, a local miller. His daughter, Louise Moore, kept the dog and gave it a much different life and named him Beautiful Joe because of how less than beautiful he looked. The dog’s ears and tail had been cut off at some point. The dog grew old and eventually died still living with the family in Meaford.

Joe became famous and never knew a thing about it.

Margaret Marshall Saunders (1861 – 1947) met the dog while visiting her brother and his fiancée, Louise Moore, in 1892. The story inspired her to write a novel from the dog’s point of view.

However, she changed the location of the story to Maine (in the US) in order to enter a literary contest sponsored by the American Humane Education Society. She also changed names in the story and she wrote the story under the name Marshall Saunders because she thought a woman writer would not be taken seriously. She did win the contest and the book was first published in 1893.

Beautiful Joe was the first Canadian book to sell over a million copies. By the 1930′s the book had sold over 7 million copies around the world. Beautiful Joe has appeared in several editions, been translated into ten different languages.

The sequel, Beautiful Joe’s Paradise, was published by Marshall Saunders in 1902.beautiful joe plaqueThe book contributed to worldwide awareness of animal cruelty. The Beautiful Joe Heritage Society was started in 1994 and continues to run . You can find the Beautiful Joe Park and monument if you visit the town of Meaford.

Old Blog – April 2003

APRIL 14, 2003
BONZI BUDDY INVASIONI’ve updated my AdAware. LavaSoft’s freeware spy catcher software. It works great. Much better than the old version I’ve had for ages. It just occured to me to check for an update. The new version got rid of a lot of stuff, mostly left from Alexa, that the old version of AdAware didn’t catch.

PS- Snood is working fine now but it did automatically install that damn Bonzi Buddy on my computer. No screen to ask if it was ok first. I just opened my menu and there it was. It was all over the computer too. Very invasive. Very poor of the Snood people to do that. Makes me angry really. They want you to pay for their game but they stick you with invasive software that takes another program to get rid of it. At least I hope it’s all gone. How can you really be sure? I haven’t yet done a registry search but AdAware seemed to be pretty thorough in it’s own search of the registry so I’m leaving it for now.

Anyway, BOOO to Snood. I wouldn’t pay for it after this. I do like the game but I don’t want to support a company that supports Bonzi Buddy. Makes you wonder about the Snood program itself.

Posted by ltripp at 12:58 AM
APRIL 13, 2003
RIDDLE ME THISWelcome to the Weekly Escape

A weekly newsletter with quotations and really good riddles. I’ve subscribed. I especially like the riddles.

Posted by ltripp at 11:05 PM
APRIL 12, 2003
AFTERWARDSI had a great day yesterday.

The Tim Hortons I remembered from the last time I was lost but it was a LOT farther than I thought. I drove almost up to the lake. It was actually in Keswick. I stopped in Canadian Tire cause that was right there too. I bought some practical rust inhibitor for my car and the pretty impractical sewing machine. It’s pretty small but it was $40 compared to the $400 one that someone stole when I moved back here.

After all that driving I never did go to that Tim Hortons. They had it cut off in the parking lot so you had to go back on the highway and then spin around really fast to get into their driveway. Instead I had lunch at the Swiss Chalet across the street. Nice lunch at just the time before the lunch crowd started. Very peaceful and I enjoyed sitting in the sunny window.

On the way back I took a detour or two just to see where they went. I considered going home as I got back that way but instead I drove right past the house and went to Uxbridge for groceries and a Tim Hortons coffee there.

Other than the groceries which I needed anyway and the sewing machine the whole trip cost just over $20, including gas. Pretty nice day and I had the radio cranked up the whole ride. Windows down too cause it was beautiful outside after all our snow and ice.

Posted by ltripp at 12:58 PM
APRIL 11, 2003
SOMETHING I WROTE DOWN AT WORK ONE DAYYou get punished for the things you do wrong. But seldom are you rewarded for the good things. Instead, the things you do right are taken for granted. I think thats one problem in parenting. Kids who do well are over looked for the kids who do wrong. Thus kids are not rewarded for good behaviour, honesty and etc.

Posted by ltripp at 11:52 PM
LIFE OF THE BEDROOM
Life of the bedroom

What sex catagory do you fit?
brought to you by Quizilla

Posted by ltripp at 09:28 PM
FRIDAY ROAD TOURIt’s Friday and I have the day off. Plus I have money! What a great day this is shaping up to be. It’s even sunny out and most of the ice storm is melted or melting. Even our driveway is showing through again. Too bad the path up to the front door is on the sheltered side, it’s still snowbound. But they say Monday will be up to 20 degrees C. That will finish all the ice/ snow.

It was kind of neat though. How often is the snow so hard and icey that you can stand on it and not have your feet sink, not even one quarter of an inch. (Using imperial measurements for the Americans).

So, what are the plans for the day? No plans! Those are the best plans. I might go to Chapters, I might go out for lunch to the Swiss Chalet or I might just drive until I stop somewhere and see what I end up with. I might even get lost and find something new. Anyway, I know there is a Tim Hortons donut shop where I can get a coffee to start the day. Its along Woodbine but north of Newmarket. So once I shut down the computer and fill up the gas tank I’m off for adventure of the road touring kind. I could even stay over night somewhere, I have Saturday off too. But, it’s a bit too much money for hotels. If only I could win the lottery!

There were some things I could have gone to but they are all in the downtown zone. Even if I could navigate the parking I’d still have to get all the way down there. People have started driving like speed idiots again now that the weather is warming up. So, I am happy to stick with north of the city. Besides, there is more to see and always a possible old house to explore. Not guaranteeing I’ll be brave enough to go in but at least I’ll see it. I can even take pictures from the road at the very least.

Well, enough typing. Time for action. Have a great day whatever you are doing.

Posted by ltripp at 08:07 AM
APRIL 10, 2003
INVASIVE BONZAI BUDDYI was wrong, it wasn’t Gator it was worse. That invasive spam program called Bonzai Buddy, however it’s spelt. That was the program that would install itself along with Snood. You couldn’t even use Snood if you turned down Bonzai Buddy. I found my old post about the whole thing in Kids BackWash.

I wrote to the program’s creator at the time and he insisted there was nothing wrong with Bonzai Buddy and it was not completely invasive. He was misled or misleading. Either way, we’ll see if he changed his tune.

Posted by ltripp at 02:15 AM
SNOODSnood
Snood is a great game. Lots of fun to play when you should be writing or whatever else you are procrastinating on. But, last time I tried it you were forced to install Gator too. Well, I do not want Gator so I decided not to keep the game either. Tonight I ran across a link to the site so I’m trying it again.

Posted by ltripp at 01:49 AM
KILLING US SOFTLYI think the scariest war news lately has been the finding of chemical/ biological weapons. Especially with the SARS and West Nile virus so much in the news here. It’s on everyone’s mind I would think. Hospitals are closed down under quarantine. How safe does that feel? How easy are we to target with some new disease that we couldn’t even hope to fight.

How damn stupid are the Americans to make a war in this day and age? It’s also ironic that so many deaths have come about due to their own people having accidents and killing each other.

Once upon a washroom stall…

Take the toys away from the boys.

It still applies.

Posted by ltripp at 12:13 AM
MONEY MONEY MONEYTomorrow is pay day and I will have money again. What a miserable invention is money. Having to count your needs by a dollar value and having to work so many hours to make so few dollars. What sadist came up with this scheme and why do we all make ourselves contine to follow it.

I’ve already put aside two pairs of pants and one new nightie that I will buy tomorrow before I start work. The pants are both marked down to $10 from being $25 when they came in stock around Christmas. So those are a good deal. I just don’t want to think about how many hours I had to work to make $20. The nightie I need because most of mine are silky things left over from the marriage that never grew. It’s time I got myself something new and not completely practical. OK, the computer games aren’t exactly practical and maybe the nightie is more practical than any of those but… I’m the one making the rules here.

Posted by ltripp at 12:06 AM
APRIL 09, 2003
STRONG AND FREEOh Canada

Canada. Eh?

I’m thinking of titles and taglines for a Canadian newsletter at BackWash. It’s going to be monthly. There are two reasons for making it monthly. One being a lack of Canadian content to add to the newsletter. Once a month should work out just right. The other reason is that this will be my fifth newsletter at BackWash. I couldn’t do it more than monthly and find something new to write and the time to type it out.

Anyway, I like the idea of a Canadian newsletter. I don’t think I’ve really seen something like that online before. There are some “proud to be Canadian” personal sites but I don’t of any newsletters.

We’ll see how it goes.

Posted by ltripp at 12:14 AM
TODAY AND TOMORROW AND YESTERDAY TOOBlog comments are a nuisance.

I’m too tired to write tonight. I updated Adult BackWash and that’s about it for tonight. I was up early for work this morning but I’m in later, finishing at close tomorrow.

Funny how tomorrow seems like today and today seems like yesterday when you’re looking at the time and it’s 11:26 PM.

Blog spam is also a nuisance. It’s also stupid. Yeah, annoy me and leave your contact information for me to play with. Don’t think I’m quite as nice as I seem. I choose not to be a bitch, not the other way around.

Posted by ltripp at 12:00 AM
APRIL 05, 2003
RICH IS THE ONE WHO NEEDS THE LEASTI don’t know who originally came up with this and I doubt I have it exactly right, but here is a quote from “An American in Canada” a TV show on CBC TV.

The rich person is not the one who has the most, but the one who needs the least.

I really like that.

Posted by ltripp at 12:45 AM
APRIL 04, 2003
FOR FORD TEMPO PEOPLEYahoo! Groups : FordTempo

I found an email list for other Tempo owners. I posted a question about my possibly leaking gas tank. Hope someone has something constructive or informative to say about it. Now that Spring is getting closer I would like to get taking more road trips. Its nice to start out with a full tank of gas rather than half full and wondering if I should stay close to towns for the next refill or dare I wander at will. I’d rather wander at will. Getting lost, getting sidetracked and having no worries.

Posted by ltripp at 08:32 PM
APRIL 01, 2003
BLOG MAPPERBlogmapper

This is interesting. I thought it was going to be like GeoURL but it’s not.

Posted by ltripp at 11:09 PM
JANE DUVALLall I need is everything

I was going to link to this on Adult BW. Jane is the woman who reviews adult sites on the web, Jane’s Guide. But this is a lot more than a sex blog. I’m actually reading it rather than just skimming.

Posted by ltripp at 10:46 PM
I’M AN OWL?Owl. The Animal In You

Owl
Genera and species: Tyto Alba
Collective Term: A parliament of owls

Description
The owl is the tranquil face of the bird personalities. A creature of great integrity, its quiet serene demeanor accords it an air of mystery and diffidence and it is known as the serene, wise observer of human society. Always well groomed, it is a noble individual with elegantly chiseled features that borders on the fine edge of beauty and homeliness. It’s large eyes are often framed by handsome eyeglasses.

But like all birds, the owl has a penchant for remaining above the fray and can be quite eccentric in maintaining their individuality. With a tendency to lose themselves in the pursuit of knowledge, owls are prone to disconnect with the relationships that are so important to them. But, they are the first to admit their shortcomings and manage to disarm their critics with a genuinely humble self-appraisal. Abraham Lincoln used this technique rather effectively in his reign as president.

Owls have developed quite a reputation for intelligence but it’s really their calm and insightful nature that gives this impression. Instead of an intellectual approach to life they use their deeper spiritual senses to guide them, and like their nocturnal cohort the bats, have a deeply philosophical bent.

Unlike the terrestrial creatures, the owl is not a prisoner of its sex-drive, but with its air of refined sensuality is hardly shy about throwing itself into the physical aspects of a relationship. When it focuses its sharp ardor on its lover it ignites a steamy and animated encounter. The owl views sex as a complement to its relationships and certainly not as a key component. It would do well to recognize the significance of physical affection outside the bedroom, for its partner is often starved for non-sexual reassurance.

A discussion with an owl is both enlightening and challenging. It somehow manages to spin the most mundane subjects into philosophical musings on the nature of humanity and the state of the world. While these discussions are provocative and engaging, they often obscure the real purpose of communication — the revealing of one’s heart and mind. Take heed, wise owl. Remember that sometimes things are just what they seem!

Careers and Hobbies
Bank manager Judge
Diplomat Head of state

Reading Debating
Chess Philosophy

Famous Owls
Nelson Mandela, Oprah Winfrey, Abraham Lincoln. 

Posted by ltripp at 04:21 AM
APRIL FOOLS!I have no great joke planned. I won’t have time before noon. Not much anyway. I just realized it’s today. Working without a set schedule really messes with your mind and how you keep track of time. Monday was my weekend, two days smushed into one. I drove to Uxbridge. That’s become my vacation capital lately. I got a coffee at Tim Horton’s, no more free coffee on Rrroll up the Rrrim. But, I keep trying every now and then.

Happy April Fools!

Posted by ltripp at 03:56 AM
NOT ENOUGH MINUTES IN AN HOURI updated at Adult BackWash. Now I’m really tired, not quite sleepy. I have to work in the morning and wash the work uniform before I go out. How will I do it all when it’s 3:20 AM now?

Posted by ltripp at 03:53 AM

Canadian Food Blog Awards (2010)

Canadian Food Blog Awards : Eat Local London.

Nominations are now being taken for the Best Canadian Food Blogs. How exciting! This is a great way for us to share our favorite Canadian food blogs and find new addicting blogs to peruse through the winter. You can vote here http://www.beerandbuttertarts.com/cfba/nominations/nomination-form/

It got me thinking about my own favorite post on this blog and it would have to be the Cookbooks, My Friends and Treasures post I wrote back in November of 2009. You can find it here – http://www.eatlocallondon.com/2009/11/cookbooks-my-friends-and-treasures.html (wink, wink – nudge nudge)

I have some favorite food blogs (which I am going to nominate in different categories) that I would like to share here with you. They are in no particular order:

http://thelocavore.ca/

http://ontariolocavore.wordpress.com/

http://southwesternontariofoodie.blogspot.com/

http://onehundredmilemel.blogspot.com/

http://seasonalontariofood.blogspot.com/

http://ethicalgourmet.blogspot.com/

All nominated blogs must:

be based in Canada

have at least 75% food and/or drink content

use a blog-based interface

be regularly updated and current, with at least one post per month in the past 12 months

Here are the categories:

People’s Choice – Best Canadian Food Blog

Who is Canada’s best food blogger? What blog stands out with great writing, fantastic photos and interesting topics? The winner of this category will be chosen through a public vote.

Best Writing

This category is for blogs that demonstrate consistently outstanding writing. In both the short list and final judging we will be looking for a unique and insightful writing voice, attention to detail, fact checking, and journalistic integrity. We’re also all grammar fiends, so spelling, grammar and punctuation will count as well.

Best Photography

Not specifically for photography blogs, in this category we’re looking for the Canadian food and drink blog with the nicest photos. Do they complement the writing, are they well lit, attractively styled and professionally edited?

Best New Blog (Under 12 months)

The category is open only to blogs that have been created in 2010. They must have a minimum of 1 post per month from the time of creation to November.

Best Restaurant Review Blog

For bloggers who concentrate on restaurant reviews. We’re looking for professional quality photos, well-worded menu item descriptions, and overall assessments that fall within standard professional guidelines for restaurant critics (trying a number of dishes, giving new restaurants a grace period, supporting opinions).

Best Recipe Blog

This category is for the folks who primarily post recipes, but – take note – we’re mostly looking for original recipes or interesting tweaks to published recipes. Simply copying recipes from cookbooks or other blogs is probably not going to make the cut. Bonus points for having a story to go with it, or a critique of a published recipe, not a just a copy of the recipe and pictures of what you ate for dinner.

Best Baking and Dessert Blog

Cake, pie, candy, fudge. Lots of bloggers love the sweet stuff. Here we’ll be looking for original recipes, great writing and lovely photos of beautiful sweet treats.

Best Professional Blog

This category is for anyone involved in the food industry on a professional basis. We’re looking for blogs from chefs, restaurants and food businesses, as well as blogs from food organizations and personal or professional blogs from professional (eg. paid) food writers.

Best Beer Blog

Canada has a huge number of beer bloggers, so they definitely get their own category. Knowledgeable and informative writing is what we’ll be looking for here.

Best Wine/Spirits Blog

As with the beer blog category, we want to see nominations here for bloggers who demonstrate knowledge of the subject and can pass that on to readers in an interesting and informative way.

Best Individual Post

Any Canadian food blog, any category. We want to know about the one post from 2010 that made you laugh, cry or jump for joy. The one piece of writing that inspired you, or that made you run out to try that new restaurant, search out that unique ingredient, or just think about things from a different perspective.

Best Niche (Single Subject) Blog

Some people love their poutine, chicken wings, sushi or dim sum. This category is for blogs that feature one specific type of food or technique. We want to hear about bloggers that not only love their subject but are able to write about it, photograph it and inspire others to love it too.

Best Healthy Living Blog

Vegan, vegetarian, macro-biotic, flexatarian, or just environmentally-friendly, this category will feature blogs that write about nutrition and healthy foods. Note – we will not consider dieting blogs (eg. weigh-ins and calorie counts) in this category.

Best Family-Oriented Blog

What to feed the kids for dinner? This is the place to nominate food blogs that focus on innovative solutions to feeding families.

Best Regional Blog

Blogs that focus on the food and drink of one specific city or region. (For example, TasteTO – although as these awards are being run by the owners of TasteTO, we have taken our own websites out of contention for these awards.)

Best Group Blog

This is for any Canadian food blog with 2 or more regular contributors.

Best Seasonal/Local Blog

With so many bloggers focusing on seasonal, local and sustainable produce and what to do with it, we felt they deserved their own category. We’re looking for bloggers that write about everything from field to table and in between, from farming and gardening to canning and preserving.

Vote now at http://www.beerandbuttertarts.com/cfba/nominations/nomination-form/