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Heads up! I’m going to be participating in the Walk For Kids Help Phone again this year, and I need your help to reach my goal of $500! From what I can tell, that’s equivalent to an hour and 20 minutes of counselling time for kids!

This will be my 3rd year participating in the Walk for Kids Help Phone, and this year I’m making my own pledge – if I raise $500 this year, I will participate in the Walk wearing my Gi (Aikido uniform) AND on the Sunday after, I will do 1000 cuts with my Bokken (wooden practice sword) at Aikido Shugyo Dojo.

So come out and sponsor me here!

Get Excited and Make Things!

Get Excited and Make Things!

As a bit of a follow-up to my last post, I’ve decided to make this my personal motto for 2010, as it fits pretty much all of my planned projects.

I came across this last year in a few of the blogs I follow, including the one & only Wil Wheaton, and I think it sums up a really positive and forward-thinking attitude. Considering how things have gone thus far in the 21st century, I think we could use a bit more of this perspective.

















Year Of The Project

Author: Matt

Welcome to 2010, please watch your step as you board the new decade!

Unlike previous years, I’ve decided to skip my predictions for IT, other than to say that things will likely tick along as they have thus far – no big shifts in tech. I think the lack of predictions is mainly because I don’t see anything coming that really fires me up in IT – doesn’t feel like there are any big new things on the immediate horizon.

Instead, this year I’m going to talk about the things that I’m looking forward to in 2010. I’ve got some projects in mind that definitely qualify as personal development, and you never know where these kinds of projects can lead.

Make my own beer and/or cider: I’ve got a couple of friends who make their own fermented beverages, and both make some pretty high quality stuff! This year, I want to start making my own for a few reasons:

  • Cheaper per glass than the store-bought stuff
  • Make interesting concotions
  • Better information about the source of the ingredients


  • Get an Arduino and start playing around with electronics: This one might have somewhat less practical application than the first, but I’ve been wanting to try out this platform for a while. I think it probably stems from my childhood fascination with robots, and other automated devices. Plus, I can learn about electronics in general this way, and that might be a handy skill!


    Join Jamie’s Food Revolution with Virginia: My wife and I saw Jamie Oliver speak when he was in Toronto, and has inspired us to take on the challenge he put out in his book “Jamie’s Food Revolution”. We’re planning on each making a different dish from each chapter, then blogging about our own dishes as well as each others.


    Test for 5th Kyu in Aikido: Now that my schedule has become a little more sane again, I’m getting back in the dojo regularly. I don’t know if I’ll pass or not, but I’m going to work my butt off to get ready for my next test.


    Learn how to can food: Living in Ontario, we get a lot of awesome produce (especially tomatoes!), and I want to start preserving the harvest for the colder parts of the year.

    Now, I turn the microphone over to you: what are your exciting 2010 projects.

    My 15 Seconds Of Fame

    Author: Matt

    I must admit, I’m not used to national media coverage, but it was kind of cool to see my name and picture on the front page of Report On Business this past Saturday:

    ‘GLIMMERS OF HOPE’

    Last year, Kids Help Phone’s professional counsellors provided anonymous, confidential help and hope to youth throughout Canada over 2.2 million times!! I’m so proud to help such a fantastic charity and this year, they’re celebrating 20 years of being there for kids by continuing their involvement in communities across the country. Please consider pledging me in the Walk for Kids Help Phone. Every dollar counts and we need your help more than ever during these difficult times.

    Kids Help Phone provides counselling services over the phone and online to kids and teens across Canada 24 hours a day, working tirelessly to help young people deal with every kind of issue imaginable. Having met some of the counsellors in person, I can tell you that these people are worth every cent you donate. If you know someone who is young, or have children of your own, you should seriously consider supporting Kids Help Phone.

    Just to help you understand that bullying is still happening on a regular basis, here’s a recent post from Kidshelpphone.ca

    “When I was little I fell through a glass table and I have a scar on my face. A noticeable one and A LOT of people are calling me scar face and nick naming me things like that and no one want to be my friend because of it… I am a really emotional person and I’ve been balling and hyperventilating for the past 3 days… Help me =(”

    Secure online pledges can be made with VISA, MasterCard or American Express by clicking on the link below. An electronic tax receipt will be emailed to you within 24 hours. Please visit my personal pledge page and help support Kids Help Phone today! http://my.e2rm.com/personalPage.aspx?registrationID=616121&LangPref=en-CA – Even $5 would be great!

    Wow! My mind is swimming with all of the info I picked up at the Seeds of Diversity 25th Anniversary event at the Toronto Botanical Gardens. The speakers they had were fantastic, and I’m still processing everything they talked about. One of the founding members was there (can’t remember the gentleman’s name), and spoke about how the organization got started as well as his vision of its future.

    I tweeted during the event, and here’s a list of my posts:

    * En route to the Seeds of Diversity 25th anniversary at the Toronto Botanical Gardens. #Gardening #SeedsOfDiversity
    * Just finished listening to a fascinating talk about the origins of Seeds of Diversity. #SeedsOfDiversity
    * Cool project on the go called the seed library. Great concept! #SeedsOfDiversity
    * OMG, bought $5 of garlic for planting, got enough extra seed to start a small garlic farm! LOL #SeedsOfDiversity
    *Just finished listening to Gayla Trail from YouGrowGirl.com talk about all sorts of different gardens and gardeners. #SeedsOfDiversity

    As you may have noticed in my tweets, I mentioned some garlic. The gentleman who was selling the garlic had a variety he called “Nono”, since his grandfather brought it over with him from Italy about 60 years ago. The cool thing was, he was including a small pack of garlic seeds with each of the bulbs. Now, I figured when I bought 6 bulbs, I’d get one or two packs at the most. Instead, I ended up with six!! To be honest, I don’t know what I’m going to do with all that garlic seed – probably offer some up for swaps, and maybe give some to relatives and friends. I also picked up some other seeds, to help round out my current stocks, including a resupply of carrots (I was running a bit low).

    The first speaker was Collete Murphy, of Urban Harvest, who spoke on a variety of topics around the Slow Food conferences, which she attended as a delegate in 2006 and 2008. She had a great deal to say, and it was all really interesting, but it was also a bit disorganized – there wasn’t much structure to the whole thing.

    The second speaker was one of the founders of the organization, whose name I didn’t get down unfortunately. The focus of his talk was about the origins and future of the organization, and why it had been successful. His oratory approach was to frame it like a discussion between a parent and a grown child, with a bit of sexual innuendo. I really enjoyed the points he made about the organization not being centred around a person, but rather around a great many people, and that even if the executive committee walked away today, the organization would be able to continue.

    The third speaker was Bob Wildfong, who is the executive director of Seeds of Diversity. His topic was their atest project: the Seed Library. As I understand it, this project is intended to address the gap between the seed sellers, and the seed banks. On the one hand, seed sellers get a lot of seed out there and growing, which means that the varieties are adapting to the specific conditions where they are growing. The problem there is, they can only sell about 10% of the varieties needed to sustain biodiversity. On the other hand, seed banks can help retain huge swaths of biodiversity, but because they aren’t “in the field”, they are static, and thus when planted out in 10-30 years, they will not have had a chance to gradually adapt to the environmental changes that have occured over time. The Seed Library project will allow people to donate seeds, as well as donate money to help ensure that varieites are “backed up” in seed banks, as well as kept in circulation to keep the vareity alive and adapting. It’s a pretty complicated project, and I don’t see anything on their website yet, but I’d definitely suggest keeping an eye out for it.

    The fourth speaker was Mary Brittain, who owns the Cottage Garden Seed Company. Her talk was an introduction to some of the interesting stories and myths behind the names of heirloom varieties. I knew that there had to be reasons for the names, but hearing the stories really helped me to better understand the origins of some of the plants and varieties out there.

    The final speaker of the day was Gayla Trail, of YouGrowGirl.com fame. She talked about her experiences documenting all sorts of different gardens and gardeners, mainly the less “mainstream” ones. I really enjoyed her talk, because it reminded me that gardening is something that a wide swath of people interpret in a lot of different ways, and that it can be a good way to manage one’s own biases.

    Aah, how refreshing!

    Author: Matt

    Well, after 3 years of finding other things to do, I finally got around to updating my WordPress install! To mark this historic occasion, I picked up a new non-default theme and added a Twitter widget! Yay! I’ll also be updating soon with a tag cloud, once I’m using more tags – previous posts didn’t have that option.

    Anyway, please feel free to post comments as to what you think of the new format. I would really appreciate your feedback.




    Bean Sprouting

    Originally uploaded by matthew_middleton_dot_ca

    Amazingly enough, I’ve got seeds sprouting after 5 days. As you can see by the picture, one of my beans is a serious keener, but I’ve also got a couple of other bean sprouts coming up, as well as some peas, and (off-camera) a tomato sprout.

    I’m not sure if it’s the Seed Starter, putting the Ott Lite on them at night, the compost, or the fact that I fussed over moving them to follow the sun over the long weekend (3 days of near-full sun wasn’t going to be wasted, at least not if I was around to do something about it). Could even be a combination of some or all of those factors.

    Luckily, I’ve already started saving containers to use as temporary pots, as the soil outside the window is not nearly warm enough for even the keener bean. I still need to track down some soil for those containers, but I don’t anticipate that being too much trouble.