While the British have a depressing culinary heritage, they have
passed on other redeeming qualities to their former colonies - like tea
and cricket and beautifully kept and manicured gardens. While our stay
in Victoria was brief, it was filled with non-stop oohs and aahs over
flowers and plants. We have been flung back into Canadian springtime and
Victoria really put on a show for us- like a peacock trying to seduce
us back to home soil. Our children got to run through fields dotted
with daffodils, climb trees dripping with blossoms and throw pebbles
into streams of clear bubbling water.
The first thing Sophia said
when exiting the airport in BC was "mama, it smells great here!" But in
Victoria it wasn't just the public parks that were expertly gardened. It
seemed all the homes we walked by were expertly tended to and a free
attraction. I didn't see any derelict neglected homes. I didn't even see
any homes with just a lawn. Not all cities are so consistently and
extensively and expertly groomed like Victoria is and, while there might
be a better reason, I am going to attribute this gardening culture to
lingering effects of Victoria's British past. It wasn't just the flowers
that impressed, the entire city exuded a feeling of order and
cleanliness that was charming. And, when you think about it, unfathomable.
How does a city create a culture of gardening? How are the streets so
eerily clean? Do they mop the roads each morning? Is this about
elementary school curriculum? And how does that super tall totem pole we
saw (the world tallest apparently) not fall down? Victoria, you have
piqued our curiosity.
And as we start to explore more of
the area I am falling back in love with evergreen trees and vast cedar
forests. While in Australia I was all about the eucalyptus- their grace,
soft spoken hues, diversity, intriguing aroma and fierceness in the
face of fire. But evergreen forests, with their bold contrasting colors,
tall confidence, blankets of snow and spicy perfume, have a certain
enchantment that the eucalyptus lacks. While I can picture bilbies and
cute feral children hiding in a eucalyptus forest, I wouldn't be
surprised if I found fireflies and fairies nestled among the cedar
roots.
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Busy beavers |
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Victoria beach |
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Bad picture of me but the baby is adorable |
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Tova insisted the motel bed sash was a perfect baby carrier for her |
A beautiful description. Makes me want to go there.
ReplyDeleteand she's smirking about it too
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