tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7402829.post115594439593391401..comments2023-10-21T11:35:09.795-03:00Comments on hearing/loss: King's Landing with the kids.ronniehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14044863062652781155noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7402829.post-1156030566058278052006-08-19T20:36:00.000-03:002006-08-19T20:36:00.000-03:00Hey, hey, they were refugees - they took what they...Hey, hey, they were refugees - they took what they got and they <I>liked</I> it.<BR/><BR/>(Seriously, after living for 15 years on a river that floods every spring, with greater or lesser degree of trouble, I find myself wondering, "Didn't the first settlers ask themselves <I>why</I> the soil along here was so damn fertile? Ask a Maliseet? A Mik'maq? <I>Anything</I>?")ronniehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14044863062652781155noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7402829.post-1155989315302107102006-08-19T09:08:00.000-03:002006-08-19T09:08:00.000-03:00I'm reading this saying "Sounds kind of like Upper...I'm reading this saying "Sounds kind of like Upper Canada Village" and then, as I read on, "Sounds a lot like Upper Canada Village!" So I click on the link and read about how it all came about ... and now it sounds exactly like Upper Canada Village, except that, rather than flooded and displaced by a dam, the Loyalist villages there were flooded and displaced by the Seaway project. <BR/><BR/>Mikehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16807727819590358834noreply@blogger.com