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Discussion Boards => General Discussion => Topic started by: polekat62 on July 01, 2008, 12:32:26 PM

Title: Happy Canada Day
Post by: polekat62 on July 01, 2008, 12:32:26 PM
Happy Canada Day to all you model railroaders from Victoria BC and it is a beautiful sunny day here.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: WoundedBear on July 01, 2008, 12:35:31 PM
Happy 141st Canada, from Edmonton, AB.

Sid
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: rogertra on July 01, 2008, 06:00:54 PM
Yes indeed, a happy Canada Day from sunny and warm Victoria, BC.

Polecat, you going down to see the fireworks tonight?

Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: az2rail on July 01, 2008, 08:25:01 PM
Happy Canada Day to all you Canadians, from Arizona. A year ago, I was riding my bike at Whistler B. C. Bruce
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: SteamGene on July 01, 2008, 08:32:59 PM
Sorry I don't know the words to "Oh Canada."  I'm good at "God Save the Queen," though.  ;D
Gene
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: grumpy on July 02, 2008, 12:51:17 AM
If you wanted to sing God Save The Queen we  would stop what we were doing to listen.
Don :)
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Yampa Bob on July 02, 2008, 01:50:52 AM
Happy Canada Day, from Colorful Colorado.  At 7,000 feet elevation where I live, it is now a comfortable 50 degrees.

My last trip to Canada was over 40 years ago but I remember one incident quite well.  One of my associates asked a waitress at a roadside diner near Ottawa: "Hey honey, how about some basted eggs?"  She waved a spatula in his face and said "I'll baste you honey".  She was laughing all the while, as the guy was already "basted" from a party on the US side. (I was the designated driver).
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Steve Magee on July 02, 2008, 02:04:19 AM
Yep, a very happy Canada Day to all Canucks from a fellow Commonwealth country (other side of the equator though) :)

Steve
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: smcgill on July 02, 2008, 09:43:56 AM
Happy Canada Day!!  ;D
I'm on the way back to N.B. on the 10th from Mass.  :-*
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Santa Fe buff on July 02, 2008, 01:46:13 PM
Let July 1st be Canadian Railroads day as well. Happy day to yesterday! That's when I remodeled my friend's layout, that 7.0 grade was just terrible!
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: rogertra on July 02, 2008, 04:32:24 PM
Quote from: SteamGene on July 01, 2008, 08:32:59 PM
Sorry I don't know the words to "Oh Canada."  I'm good at "God Save the Queen," though.  ;D
Gene

It's OK Gene, most Canadians don't know the words either.  :)

They do know the Star Spangled Banner though.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 02, 2008, 05:58:27 PM
Ah, yes, Dominion Day, 7-1-1867

Here are some other important Canadian dates.  Can(ada) you ID them?

1-1-1922
12-1-1922
4-15-1923
5-1-1924
1-1-1947

(My mom was raised in AB)

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: BIG BEAR on July 02, 2008, 10:44:08 PM

        A few years ago my wife & I took a Cruise to Canada over the canada day weekend. We got off the ship to shop & sight see, many shops were closed but the ones that stayed open for us made out like bandits.
       I also remember when the ship went to leave a Kilt laden man playing
Amazing Grace on the bag pipes. That was the coolest rendition of one of my favorite  songs I've ever heard.

            Barry
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Spule 4 on July 02, 2008, 11:09:30 PM
I listened to my new Lenoard Cohen CD today (the recent Capitol release of his 1967 debut album) in hono(u)r of it.   I guess I could run up to the Publix and get a Coffe Crisp bar too, so happy that someone has them in Nashville, TN now!
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 03, 2008, 03:23:40 AM
Greetings.

I remember having my first Cadbury Caramello bar while visiting my AB cousins in the 1960's.  My taste buds thought they'd died and gone to heaven.  A flavor to look forward to every time we'd visit. 

Decades later, it became available in the US.  A bike ride to the local Fast Fuel & Fajitas vs. a 1500 mile trip for "a taste of Canada". 

Unfortunately, we don't get up there quite as often now with the high fuel prices. 

Hmm.  No answers yet on my Canadain trivia questions?  C'mon, Canucks...

(Hint: Actual Canadian historical dates....not my Aunts' and Uncles' birthdays...)

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik 

     
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: SteamGene on July 03, 2008, 09:02:23 AM
They do know the Star Spangled Banner though.

All five verses, Roger?  Including the violently anti-British one?   :D
Gene
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 04, 2008, 11:31:34 AM
Another clue:

Here are some other important Canadian dates.  Can(ada) you ID them?

1-1-1922
12-1-1922
4-15-1923
5-1-1924
1-1-1947

Hint #1: Actual Canadian historical dates - not a joke.
Hint #2: All dates have the same thing in common.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: rogertra on July 04, 2008, 02:44:18 PM
Quote from: Joe Satnik on July 04, 2008, 11:31:34 AM
Another clue:

Here are some other important Canadian dates.  Can(ada) you ID them?

1-1-1922
12-1-1922
4-15-1923
5-1-1924
1-1-1947

Hint #1: Actual Canadian historical dates - not a joke.
Hint #2: All dates have the same thing in common.

Jan. 01, 1922 Drivers in BC stopped driving on the left and started driving on the right.

Apr. 15, 1923 drivers in Nove Scoria started driving on the right.

May 01, 1924 May Day becomes a holiday in Canada?

Jan. 1, 1947, the Canadian Citizenship Act came into effect and Canadians finally became "Canadian citizens" rather than British Citizens living in Canada.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: SteamGene on July 04, 2008, 05:59:51 PM
I thought Canadians and British were still "subjects."
Happy Fourth of July!
Gene
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: rogertra on July 04, 2008, 06:58:18 PM
"I thought Canadians and British were still "subjects."
Happy Fourth of July!
Gene"

Canadian and Brits are still "subjects" because Canada is a Consitutional Monarchy, with the Queen as Head of State.  

However, prior to Jan. 01, 1947 all Canadians were British Citizens not Canadian Citizens.  That's the difference.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 04, 2008, 09:30:42 PM
Hint 2:  All dates have the same thing in common. 

Good going Roger, right hand side of the road driving was what I was looking for. 

1-1-1922 correct. (BC)

4-15-1923 correct (NS)

Continue, please. 

These dates are very important because these provinces became "independent" from British rule:  British Left Hand "Rule of the Road", that is. 

Hint 3: One of the dates corresponds to a "not quite yet a" province.

Hope this helps.

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik 
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: grumpy on July 05, 2008, 12:18:40 AM
Newfoundland became a province of Canada
Don
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 08, 2008, 12:43:37 PM
Thanks, Don for your input.

Just to close this out, I'll match the rest of the dates and provinces.  I dug around Google for this info.  I found all 5 provinces named at one site, but not all the dates.

The Provinces in the middle of Canada were already right hand side of the road, as much business/travel was with the US.  The coastal provinces remained with the British "left hand rule" until the following dates: 

Jan. 1, 1922 -- Britsh Columbia
Dec. 1, 1922 -- New Brunswick
Apr. 15, 1923 -- Nova Scotia
May 1, 1924 -- Prince Edward Island
Jan. 1, 1947 -- Newfoundland (became province in 1949)

Here is an interesting read - "The Year of Free Beef"

http://www.i18nguy.com/driver-side.html (http://www.i18nguy.com/driver-side.html)

Scroll a little more than 1/3 of the way down the page.

"The Geneva Convention on Road Traffic (1949)"

(Start Quote)
Article 9(1) of the United Nations' Geneva Convention on Road Traffic (1949)[21] requires each country to have a uniform direction of traffic, i.e. each country may have either left-hand traffic or right-hand traffic, but not both. The exact wording of the article is:

" All vehicular traffic proceeding in the same direction on any road shall keep to the same side of the road, which shall be uniform in each country for all roads. Domestic regulations concerning one-way traffic shall not be affected. "

Before that, a country could have different rules in different parts, for example Canada until the 1920s.
(End Quote)

This from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driving_on_the_left_or_right (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driving_on_the_left_or_right)

Hope this helps.

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik
 

 
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Santa Fe buff on July 08, 2008, 05:51:38 PM
Quote from: Joe Satnik on July 02, 2008, 05:58:27 PM
Ah, yes, Dominion Day, 7-1-1867

Here are some other important Canadian dates.  Can(ada) you ID them?

1-1-1922
12-1-1922
4-15-1923
5-1-1924
1-1-1947

(My mom was raised in AB)

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik
The first date has no data for any inportant Canadian events in History, according to this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922_in_Canada
Neither the second.
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Pacific Northern on July 08, 2008, 06:40:38 PM
Quote from: Santa Fe buff on July 08, 2008, 05:51:38 PM
Quote from: Joe Satnik on July 02, 2008, 05:58:27 PM
Ah, yes, Dominion Day, 7-1-1867

Here are some other important Canadian dates.  Can(ada) you ID them?

1-1-1922
12-1-1922
4-15-1923
5-1-1924
1-1-1947

(My mom was raised in AB)

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik
The first date has no data for any inportant Canadian events in History, according to this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922_in_Canada
Neither the second.

Santa Fe
Read the posting prior to yours
Title: Re: Happy Canada Day
Post by: Joe Satnik on July 09, 2008, 10:40:50 AM
Dear Santa Fe,

Sometimes you have to dig (Google) a little deeper to find the treasure (answers)...

Sincerely,

Joe Satnik