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| Bad Bunny listing off countries in the Americas in the show |
Goodbye HK, Hello YVR
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Canadians After the Super Bowl Half Time Show
Bad Bunny's Infectious Music Crosses the Pacific
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| Bad Bunny dancing the salsa with Lady Gaga |
All the talk today is about how Bad Bunny killed it yesterday at the Super Bowl Half Time Show. Latinos, and in particular Puerto Ricans are so proud that Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio made them feel seen and in a thoughtful, energetic, cultural way, from the sugar cane fields, to the old men playing dominos, freshly-made tacos, a real wedding party, the electricity poles, and on and on.
Yes there are actually MAGA people on social media who panned the show, saying it was "boring." How could anyone resist such happy beats?
He called on people to believe in themselves and his final message, "The only thing more powerful than hate is love" is what we really need right now.
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| He smiled at hearing he is No. 1 in China |
He is the first Latin music artist to rank No. 1 in China, thanks to college students turning to the likes of Bad Bunny and J Balvin to learn Spanish.
According to a study from Barcelona's Universitat Pompeu Fabra, the number of Chinese students taking translation and language science classes has increased 37 percent from five years ago, though the learning materials aren't as developed as they are for learning English.
The UPF study, which was published last year in the journal "Language and Intercultural Communication," says these amateur translators collaborate with Latin music lovers on NetEase Cloud Music to make it easier for the Chinese to understand some of reggaeton's idiomatic Spanish cultural references that don't have Chinese equivalents.
During an Apple Music preview days before the Super Bowl, Bad Bunny found out he was No. 1 in China and he bowled over with a massive smile, incredulous at the news.
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| The "64" is a nod to his uncle's birth year |
It turns out is was the birth year of his uncle, who passed away.
Bad Bunny had wanted to take his uncle to the Super Bowl, but this was his way to dedicate the show to him.
However, the Chinese censors didn't get the memo and started deleting his pictures with "64," worried it was a reference to 1989...
Monday, February 9, 2026
Peruvian Flair in Vancouver's Chinatown
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| Blue fin tuna and crab causa wrapped with nori and caviar |
Vancouver's Chinatown continues to gentrify with the opening of Uchu, a fancy seafood restaurant "with Peruvian soul" a few days ago.
It is the sister restaurant to the wildly successful Suyo, a modern Peruvian restaurant that I and two friends ate dinner at during the summer. We enjoyed the various dishes not only for their colourful presentations, but also for the array of textures and flavours that made each bite interesting and delicious.
| High-ceiling bar with a long counter |
Uchu is in the space formerly occupied by Sai Woo which served no-so-good Chinese food, then was replaced with Kosoo Pocha, which served Korean tapas.
Valverde and his team took over the space in March 2025 and spent 11 months renovating it into a high ceiling open bar and kitchen concept serving mostly ceviche-style seafood bites that we got to try the other evening.
They included items like oyster cevichero, a fresh oyster topped with leche de tigre espuma, or tiger's milk foam, blue fin tuna and crab causa, or potato wrapped in nori and finished with a few caviar pearls.
There were also a kind of salmon sushi with a rice cracker on top, and for dessert dulce de leche, and a sweet caramel creme with a honeycomb on top.
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| Various Peruvian-inspired bites |
For those who are looking for spirit-free cocktails like, me, the chicha morada was like a fancy juice made from purple corn, pineapple, green apple, cinnamon and lime, and the pachamama that was a non-alcoholic Old Fashioned using rose, black tea, amarno, chocolate and palo santo with an ice cube with "Ucha" embossed on it.
At the party there were some elderly Chinese men taking in the food and drink and we asked one who they were. He explained they were with the Chan Wing Chung Tong Society of Canada, who rented the space to the restaurant group.
We asked him how much the rent was, and he said it was four figures which we thought was very reasonable for a restaurant like this, charging Suyo prices in Chinatown.
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| Spirit-free Old Fashioned |
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Review: Hamnet
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| Buckley and Mescal star in the Oscar-nominated Hamnet |
The heavy rain today was a good reason to head to the theatre to watch Hamnet, the film by Chloe Zhao that has been nominated for eight Oscars, including best picture, best director, best adapted screenplay and best actress.
I have to admit I did not see Nomadland so I was not sure what I was expecting with Hamnet.
It is a devastating, intense processing of grief, and how people deal with it differently.
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| Buckley plays Agnes, Shakespeare's wife |
The scene opens with two tall trees with their roots entwined, as Agnes lies curled up near their roots; she is a free-spirited, strong-headed woman, the daughter of a forest witch, who knows herbal medicinal treatments, and when holding someone's hand, can see into their futures.
Shakespeare is a Latin tutor, frustrated as he is working to pay off his father's debts. He wants to write plays, but is stuck in a small village. He meets Agnes and to help the story move along quickly, they get married and have children, an older daughter Susanna and twins, Hamnet and Judith.
But the bubonic plague spreads and Hamnet dies, and this scene is absolutely tragic, watching Agnes' reaction. In an podcast interview with the New York Times, Buckley says there was no particular direction in the script about how the scene would play out; they just let the camera roll, and viewers are in agony watching Agnes in raw emotional pain.
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| Watson delivers important lines in the film |
Meanwhile, Shakespeare's mother (Emily Watson) says the most poignant lines in the film, as she too has experienced the loss of a child.
"What is given may be taken away, at anytime," she says. "The trick is never to let down your guard. Never think you are safe. Never take for granted that your children's hearts beat, that they sup milk, that they draw breath, that they walk and speak and smile and argue and play. Never for a moment forget they may be gone, snatched from you in the blink of any eye, borne away from you like thistledown."
It is words of advice that transcend time.
Hamnet is a slow-moving film, giving a lot of time for the actors and the scene to breathe before moving on. The bubonic plague is not a big storyline in the plot, but it's not really hovering much in the background either.
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| Zhao (middle) with the cast of Hamnet |
Perhaps that explains why Buckley has the best actress nomination, but Mescal also deserves a nod for his portrayal of a frustrated artist who channeled his anger and grief into one of his best plays, Hamlet.
Interesting to note that Buckley says while shooting the film she was so keen on having a child that after they finished filming, she got pregnant a month afterwards.
She first saw the film eight months pregnant and says the experience of being Agnes has profoundly affected her as a mother.
Hamnet
Directed by Chloe Zhao
126 minutes
Saturday, February 7, 2026
Let the Winter Games Begin
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| The cauldron at Milano was lit creating a giant fireball |
The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics has officially begun and the opening ceremonies went off without a hitch -- including the woman showing Italian hand gestures as her microphones didn't work (on purpose).
Nice blend of classical with Andrea Bocelli singing Nessun Dorma, and Lang Lang on the piano in a white suit and black shoes, and a voluptuous Mariah Carey in her regal robes belting out Volare.
How the Italians dealt with the lighting of the cauldron in two locations was spectacularly done, with the sun-like structure inspired by Leonardo da Vinci's intricate knot designs. It turned from blue to red and set off the fireworks which was an exhilarating display.
Can we talk about some of the uniforms?
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| Canadians wear maple leafs on their bodies |
Others preferred the Roots designs from before featuring red and white varsity jackets with the red berets worn backwards.
Probably the most consistently preppy are the American uniforms designed by Ralph Lauren, unabashedly featuring the American flag all over the sweaters and jackets.
Mongolia got a shout-out for its traditional garb, inspired by the 13th and 15th Mongol Empire. The long robes were made with Mongolian cashmere and designed to keep the athletes warm, as they would have done centuries ago.
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| Shades of blue from the Chinese team |
This year the Chinese team was dressed by Li-Ning and the athletes came out in shades of blue -- dark for men, pastel for women. How yawningly predictable.
Nevertheless, Chinese state media have praised the uniforms, adding netizens have commented, "China looks awesome" and "This looks so cool."
Can we also talk about no sign of Eileen Gu, the Chinese-American freestyle skier who makes US$23 million a year from non-sports activities from modelling to endorsements? She was not the flag bearer again this year.
This will be her second Olympics after she won two golds and a silver at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games and conveniently seems to be able to represent China despite holding two passports (which China does not allow dual citizenship).
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| Will Gu repeat her medal performance this year? |
That statement seems to fit neatly into one comment online: "Being Chinese like Eileen Gu once every four years is just about right; being Chinese everyday is a bit too challenging."
The scrutiny of this 22-year-old continues! And it will keep going if she competes again in 2030...
Friday, February 6, 2026
Canadian is Top Dog at Westminster Show
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| Linton with Penny and their prizes as Best in Show |
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| Linton kisses Penny on their win |
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| Penny posing with the New York skyline |
Indeed -- what an accomplishment especially with his own personal health challenges. Highly respected by his peers, Linton has proven he is not a one-hit wonder, and plans to continue working with six dogs as long as he can.
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Vancouver Will Have One Night of Fireworks
| The city will have a fireworks show this year |
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
So Long, Sammy's Kitchen
| Restaurant was an institution for over 50 years |
The latest old school restaurant to close in Hong Kong is Sammy's Kitchen in Sheung Wan. It was well known for its giant neon cow sign which was taken down in 2015 after it was deemed an illegal structure, but thankfully it is preserved at M+ in West Kowloon.
It was sad news to hear of its impending closure, but it wasn't the first time the restaurant threatened to shutter.
| One could have escargots in garlic butter sauce |
The restaurant was best known for Hong Kong style western food, like beef Stroganoff, escargots with garlic butter baked in cheese, beef Wellington and even Chateaubriand for two. Don't forget desserts like peach Alaska, souffle, and banana flambe.
It was opened over 50 years ago by Sammy Yip and his friends, who had experience working in hotel kitchens and decided to strike out on their own.
When I went nine years ago, the cavernous, dim restaurant was run down and tired. Tables were covered in plastic sheets with a Burberry tartan design.
| Hong Kong style western food on the menu |
Did no one think to at least edit down the menu a bit to make it easier for the kitchen and control food costs a bit more?
Nevertheless, perhaps there is a time and place for things and the food at Sammy's Kitchen is long past it's due date.
There are many other restaurants in Hong Kong that do beef Wellington and Chateaubriand much better, though I will concede probably cost more. And in general diners are more sophisticated and expect better quality, which is why they have also moved on from Sammy's Kitchen.
At least we'll have the neon cow sign to remember it by.
Sunday, February 1, 2026
End of the Line for Frozen Juice from Concentrate
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| Frozen juice from concentrate will be discontinued |
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Review: Grit by Angela Duckworth
What makes someone succeed? University of Pennsylvania Psychology professor Angela Duckworth believes it's a combination of discipline, passion and grit.
In 2016 she wrote the book Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance with lots of interesting stories backed up with research, her own and many other psychologists past and present. You could say Duckworth is passionate about the subject and determined to know everything there is to know about grit.
Some of the stories on people like Jeff Bezos when he was a child, or Warren Buffet's tips on career goals, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll in 2013, and actor Will Smith insisting he will be No. 1, one way or another, who said this in 2003:
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| Duckworth has numerous examples of grit |
He said this long before he smacked Chris Rock on stage during the Academy Awards in 2022. This kind of dates Duckworth's book (and same with how Bezos has turned out), but their stories still show how they became successful.
In Grit, Duckworth says just because someone has talent or genius doesn't mean they have grit , compared to someone who is determined and practices relentlessly. When you have talent and add effort, you get skill. And with skill added with more effort leads to achievement.
But what about flow, the state in which athletes and artists do their sport or art effortlessly? A competitive figure skater described it like this:
"It was just one of those programs that clicked. I mean everything went right, everything felt good... it's just such a rush, like you could feel it could go on and on and on, like you don't want it to stop because it's going so well. It's almost as though you don't have to think, everything goes automatically without thinking..."
It is a state that does not have anything to do with improvement, Duckworth says. "In other words, deliberate practice is for preparation, and flow is for performance."What is deliberate practice? She says it is a clearly defined stretch goal; full concentration and effort; immediate and informative feedback; and repetition with reflection and refinement.
In order to do that it doesn't necessarily mean endless hours of doing something over and over again, but intentional, deliberate practice with the goal of improving, which entails making it a habit, a ritual that is done daily.
With these kinds of ideas and research, readers wonder what they can do to get grit, and Duckworth addresses this in the last few chapters of the book, particularly how parents can instil grit in their children through discipline, but not the Asian Tiger Mom way, but teaching them to finish what they started and to do it well.
It also has to do with passion, because without it, why bother? Duckworth says if a child wants to quit a sport or a musical instrument or dance, they can't stop on a whim, or when they have a bad day; they should only do that when there is a natural end, like the season or school year is over.
She also stresses that it's important to be a role model for your children, so they see that you struggle and that you are determined to finish a challenge like a marathon, or complete writing a book.
As writer Alex Martinez says: "To finish things, you have to put the work in. When I was younger, I'd meet many people who were writing stuff. They'd say to me, 'Oh yeah, I am a writer as well, but I've never finished anything.' Well, in that case, you are not a writer. You are just somebody who sits down and writes things on a bit of paper. If you've got something to say, go ahead and say it and finish it."
But one doesn't have to be a parent to try to instil grit in children -- they can be extended family, friends and teachers who encourage kids by giving them opportunities and knowing how to push them, by saying things like, "I'm giving you these comments because I have very high expectations and I know that you can reach them", instead of "I'm giving you these comments so that you'll have feedback on your paper."
The child or student realises that someone believes in them and wants to see them do well which can inspire them to do better next time. That's what Duckworth's research shows.
When it comes to work, company culture that promotes grit will also develop employees who want to work hard. Not the Chinese "996" way, where one works from 9am to 9pm, six days a week, but what Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase says in the company manual, How We do Business:
"Have a fierce resolve in everything you do." "Demonstrate determination, resiliency, and tenacity." "Do not let temporary setbacks become permanent excuses." and "Use mistakes and problems as opportunities to get better -- not reasons to quit."
And finally, don't just finish something, but finish strong, putting in as much effort as you did in the beginning and at the end.
Duckworth says one can grow their grit and the time to start is now.
Thursday, January 29, 2026
It Can't Get More Canadian Than This
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| Carney asks Williams to "do the leg thing" in photo op |
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| Carney praised Tierney (second from right) |
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| The Canada fleece will be available "soon"... |
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Celebrating Failure as a Sign of Progress
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Anne Frank's Story Still Resonates Today
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| Thinking of Anne Frank on Holocaust Remembrance Day |
When I was in elementary school, my mother gave me a copy of The Dairy of a Young Girl and got to know Anne Frank this way, and was impressed by her deep, sophisticated, thoughtful observations and feelings at a young age. This was also how I got to learn about the horrors of the holocaust.
January 27 is International Holocaust Remembrance Day and I just saw a traveling exhibition in a school in Vancouver called "Anne Frank: A History for Today."
Presented by Anne Frank House, there are several large panels that document what was happening in Europe in the 1930s with the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany and how these big historical events coincided with those of the Frank family.
Anne was born on June 12, 1929 and had an older sister, Margot, her mother Edith, and father Otto. Anne writes that her father was 36 years old when he married her mother who was 25 in 1925.
The stock market crash in 1929 which led to the Great Depression resulted in growing unemployment, and Hitler of the Nazi party promised jobs, promoted antisemitism, and criticised communism. When his party was voted into power, Hitler began doing as he promised, and began making life difficult for Jews, attacking Jewish people and businesses in Kristallnacht, or Night of the Broken Glass.
Germans were told not to patronise Jewish businesses, or associate with them, and later Jews were forced to give up their businesses to the government. Nazis didn't like gypsies, Blacks or the disabled either.
The Franks were uneasy with the situation and in 1933 they moved to Amsterdam where Otto set up a company that sold spices and pectin to make jam.
But the Nazis weren't satisfied with just controlling Germany. In 1939 the Nazis invaded Poland and the following year entered the Netherlands, which surrendered in a week.
In the meantime Otto tried to apply for visas for the United States, Cuba and Britain, but they were either granted and he didn't receive it on time, or their applications were not approved. In July 1942 the family began living in the secret annex behind his office, which is where Anne recorded her innermost thoughts for two years, until they were suddenly arrested in August 1944.
Anne and her sister Margot died days of each other of typhus in a concentration camp, mother Edith died on the way to the camp, and Otto was the only survivor of the family, when he and others were liberated by the Soviets in January 1945.
Watching a documentary about the Franks and Nazism immediately drew parallels with the ICE raids in the United States, in particular what has happened in Minneapolis these last few weeks. Immigration Customs Enforcement agents are violently taking down and arresting who they think are illegal immigrants, detaining them and sending them out of the country.
They are doing President Donald Trump's bidding, as he claimed these undocumented people are violent drug dealers, rapists, pedophiles, murderers, gang members, and terrorists who need to be removed from the country.
The US Department of Homeland Security reports to have removed over 670,000 people, and over 2 million self-deportations.
Now two American citizens are dead after trying to protect these alleged criminals.
It is eerie and shocking to see how this is happening today just south of the border from us.
How is it that history is repeating itself in 2026!
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Review: Rental Family
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| Fraser plays a token white guy trying to help Japanese people |
An unemployed American actor in Tokyo is desperate for work and stumbles on an opportunity -- to play the part his client is paying him for -- a journalist, a second gamer, a groom, a father.
That's the premise of Rental Family, starring Brendan Fraser as Phillip Vanderploeg as the aforementioned gaijin, or foreigner in Japanese. It seems the part is made for him until you see that he executive produced the comedy-drama, which is not particularly hilarious, but sweet at times during the 110 minutes.
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| Phillip connects with an actor with dementia |
In the case of single mother Hitomi (Shino Shinozaki), she needs a "token white guy" to be the father of Mia (a very cute Shannon Mahina Gorman) so that she can get into a prestigious school, and for adult daughter Masami, Phillip is a journalist to jog her father Kikuo's memories, a famous elderly actor (Akira Emoto) with dementia.
Being told her father disappeared, Mia is angry when she first meets Phillip, but soon she grows attached to him and draws him pictures; he feels hey, this is a job I can do. The same could be said with his relationship with Kikuo, who feels comfortable around the American, even though he doesn't act like a journalist taking notes or recording interviews.
However, Phillip's initial reluctance becomes real when the situations he's in become more complicated, or don't go according to plan, and that's when Shinji tells him to cut the cord and extract himself from the client.
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| Phillip plays a dad to 11-year-old Mia |
Most heartwarming was the "jailbreak" that Phillip and Kikuo make to go to the latter's hometown, but viewers can sense what will happen next.
The ending seems to be neatly tied up in a bow, but Rental Family is not meant to be too deep either. Nevertheless it brings up the theme of loneliness and how people yearn connections with others. Fraser is thoughtful in his role and respectful of Japanese culture, even if his character doesn't completely understand it.
Rental Family
Directed and co-written by Hikari
110 minutes
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Canadian Cities Fight Over Heated Rivalry Star
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| Williams' star has blown up and everyone wants a piece |
Friday, January 23, 2026
Popularity of Heated Rivalry Spawns Numerous Tangents
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| Heated Rivalry has blown up as the hottest show now |
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| Analysts opined why the show appeals to women |
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| Storrie and Williams became celebs overnight |
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Fog That Wraps Around Vancouver
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| There's been some dramatic photos of Vancouver these days |
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| The Lions Gate Bridge enveloped in fog |
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Cantopop Group RubberBand in Vancouver
| Mau of RubberBand performed in Vancouver |
| Hong Kong fans embraced the band at the Vogue |
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
China's Birthrate Continues to Fall
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| China's birthrate made a record 17 percent drop last year |
China's birthrate has dropped for the fourth consecutive year, despite government efforts for couples to have more children.
Last year registered births fell to 7.92 million, down 17 percent from 9.54 million in 2024, the biggest drop since the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949.
Yi Fuxian, a demographer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison was quoted in The Guardian that births in 2025 were "roughly the same level as in 1738, when China's population was only about 150 million."
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| The government's incentives aren't enough |
One of its initiatives that begins this year is 90 billion yuan (US$12.9 billion) poured into the first nationwide childcare subsidy program for children under the age of three. There are also plans to expand national healthcare insurance to cover all childbirth-related expenses, including IVF treatment.
But when the economy is slowing down coupled with high unemployment -- particularly among fresh graduates, people don't feel it's the right time to have kids, who have also become a very expensive investment.
The average cost of raising a child in China until the age of 18 is 538,000 yuan -- more than 6.3 times as high as the country's GDP per capita, compared to 4.11 times in the United States, and 4.26 times in Japan, according to a Chinese population think tank.
It's also a big problem when companies frown on young women getting married and having children, overlook them for career advancement, and society still expects women to do the household chores.
Instead women are pushing back, choosing either to remain single and childless, despite calls from the government, including Xi Jinping, for Chinese people to "actively cultivate a new culture of marriage and childbearing and strengthen guidance on young people's view on marriage, childbirth and family."
The drumbeat has already begun, with women receiving calls from community workers asking about their plans to have children. But dangling 3,600 yuan ($500) a year for families with children under the age of three is hardly much of an incentive, particularly for those living in cities.
So... perhaps a re-think on how women are treated before coming up with plans on bumping up birthrates?
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Picture of the Day: Magical Light
| When the sun hits fog among the trees |
Sometimes the forest inspires some amazing photographs and today was one of them.
This morning it was foggy, but with the forecast promising it would be sunny with a high of 10 degrees Celsius.
It was around noon when the sun hit the fog and created exciting lines of sunshine to dramatic effect.
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